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    AuthorTitleYearJournal/ProceedingsReftypeDOI/URL
    Bar-Ilan, J., Haustein, S., Peters, I., Priem, J., Shema, H. & Terliesner, J. Beyond citations: Scholars' visibility on the social Web 2012
    Vol. 1Proceedings of 17th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators, MontrĂ©al: Science-Metrix and OST, pp. 98-109 
    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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