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AuthorTitleYearJournal/ProceedingsReftypeDOI/URL
Peters, I., Haustein, S. & Terliesner, J. Crowdsourcing in Article Evaluation 2011 ACM WebSci'11   inproceedings URL  
Abstract: Qualitative journal evaluation makes use of cumulated content
scriptions of single articles. These can either be represented by
thor-generated keywords, professionally indexed subject
adings, automatically extracted terms or by reader-generated
gs as used in social bookmarking systems. It is assumed that
rticularly the users? view on article content differs significantly
om the authors? or indexers? perspectives. To verify this
sumption, title and abstract terms, author keywords, Inspec
bject headings, KeyWords PlusTM and tags are compared by
lculating the overlap between the respective datasets. Our
proach includes extensive term preprocessing (i.e. stemming,
elling unifications) to gain a homogeneous term collection.
en term overlap is calculated for every single document of the
taset, similarity values are low. Thus, the presented study
nfirms the assumption, that the different types of keywords
ch reflect a different perspective of the articles? contents and
at tags (cumulated across articles) can be used in journal
aluation to represent a reader-specific view on published
ntent.
BibTeX:
@inproceedings{peters2011crowdsourcing,
  author = {Peters, Isabella and Haustein, Stefanie and Terliesner, Jens},
  title = {Crowdsourcing in Article Evaluation},
  booktitle = {ACM WebSci'11},
  year = {2011},
  pages = {1--4},
  note = {WebSci Conference 2011},
  url = {http://journal.webscience.org/487/}
}
Bar-Ilan, J., Haustein, S., Peters, I., Priem, J., Shema, H. & Terliesner, J. Beyond citations: Scholars' visibility on the social Web 2012 Proceedings of 17th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, MontrĂ©al: Science-Metrix and OST   inproceedings URL  
Abstract: Traditionally, scholarly impact and visibility have been measured by counting
blications and citations in the scholarly literature. However, increasingly
holars are also visible on the Web, establishing presences in a growing
riety of social ecosystems. But how wide and established is this presence,
d how do measures of social Web impact relate to their more traditional
unterparts? To answer this, we sampled 57 presenters from the 2010 Leiden STI
nference, gathering publication and citations counts as well as data from the
esenters' Web "footprints." We found Web presence widespread and diverse: 84%
scholars had homepages, 70% were on LinkedIn, 23% had public Google Scholar
ofiles, and 16% were on Twitter. For sampled scholars' publications, social
ference manager bookmarks were compared to Scopus and Web of Science
tations; we found that Mendeley covers more than 80% of sampled articles, and
at Mendeley bookmarks are significantly correlated (r=.45) to Scopus citation
unts.
BibTeX:
@inproceedings{barilan2012beyond,
  author = {Bar-Ilan, Judit and Haustein, Stefanie and Peters, Isabella and Priem, Jason and Shema, Hadas and Terliesner, Jens},
  title = {Beyond citations: Scholars' visibility on the social Web},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of 17th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, Montréal: Science-Metrix and OST},
  year = {2012},
  volume = {1},
  pages = {98-109},
  url = {http://2012.sticonference.org/Proceedings/vol1/Bar-Ilan_Beyond_98.pdf}
}
Bar-Ilan, J., Haustein, S., Peters, I., Priem, J., Shema, H. & Terliesner, J. Beyond citations: Scholars' visibility on the social Web 2012   article URL  
Abstract: Traditionally, scholarly impact and visibility have been measured by counting
blications and citations in the scholarly literature. However, increasingly
holars are also visible on the Web, establishing presences in a growing
riety of social ecosystems. But how wide and established is this presence,
d how do measures of social Web impact relate to their more traditional
unterparts? To answer this, we sampled 57 presenters from the 2010 Leiden STI
nference, gathering publication and citations counts as well as data from the
esenters' Web "footprints." We found Web presence widespread and diverse: 84%
scholars had homepages, 70% were on LinkedIn, 23% had public Google Scholar
ofiles, and 16% were on Twitter. For sampled scholars' publications, social
ference manager bookmarks were compared to Scopus and Web of Science
tations; we found that Mendeley covers more than 80% of sampled articles, and
at Mendeley bookmarks are significantly correlated (r=.45) to Scopus citation
unts.
BibTeX:
@article{barilan2012beyond,
  author = {Bar-Ilan, Judit and Haustein, Stefanie and Peters, Isabella and Priem, Jason and Shema, Hadas and Terliesner, Jens},
  title = {Beyond citations: Scholars' visibility on the social Web},
  year = {2012},
  url = {http://dblp.uni-trier.de/db/journals/corr/corr1205.html#abs-1205-5611}
}

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