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Quantitative Science Studies, Volume 5
Volume 5, Number 1, Winter 2024
- Seokkyun Joshua Woo, John P. Walsh:
On the shoulders of fallen giants: What do references to retracted research tell us about citation behaviors? 1-30 - Lorena Delgado-Quirós, José Luis Ortega:
Completeness degree of publication metadata in eight free-access scholarly databases. 31-49 - Arcangelo Massari, Fabio Mariani, Ivan Heibi, Silvio Peroni, David M. Shotton:
OpenCitations Meta. 50-75 - Zaida Chinchilla-Rodríguez, Rodrigo Costas, Nicolás Robinson-García, Vincent Larivière:
Examining the quality of the corresponding authorship field in Web of Science and Scopus. 76-97 - Eleonora Dagiene:
The challenge of assessing academic books: The U.K. and Lithuanian cases through the ISBN lens. 98-127 - Haiko Lietz, Mohsen Jadidi, Daniel Kostic, Milena Tsvetkova, Claudia Wagner:
Individual and gender inequality in computer science: A career study of cohorts from 1970 to 2000. 128-152 - Sergio Pelaez, Gaurav Verma, Barbara Ribeiro, Philip Shapira:
Large-scale text analysis using generative language models: A case study in discovering public value expressions in AI patents. 153-169 - Justin Quemener, Egidio Luis Miotti, Abdelghani Maddi:
Technological impact of funded research: A case study of nonpatent references. 170-186 - Ana Teresa Santos, Sandro Mendonça:
Keeping a close watch on Innovation Studies: Opening the black box of journal editorships. 187-218 - Yuanxi Fu, Caitlin Vitosky Clarke, Mark Van Moer, Jodi Schneider:
Exploring evidence selection with the inclusion network. 219-245 - Yongxin Kong, Vicky Amar Daiya, Katy Börner:
Scholarly publications and data set evidence for the Human Reference Atlas. 246-260
- Julien Larregue, Hassina Bourihane:
The gendered structure of science does not transpire in an experimental vacuum. 261-263 - Graham Kendall:
Are open access fees a good use of taxpayers' money? 264-270
Volume 5, Number 2, Spring 2024
- Justus Henke:
Public engagement with COVID-19 preprints: Bridging the gap between scientists and society. 271-296 - Alice Fleerackers, Kenneth Shores, Natascha Chtena, Juan Pablo Alperin:
Unreviewed science in the news: The evolution of preprint media coverage from 2014-2021. 297-316 - Julián D. Cortés, Maria Catalina Ramírez Cajiao:
The policy is dead, long live the policy - Revealing science, technology, and innovation policy priorities and government transitions via network analysis. 317-331 - Madelaine Hare, Geoff Krause, Keith MacKnight, Timothy D. Bowman, Rodrigo Costas, Philippe Mongeon:
Do you cite what you tweet? Investigating the relationship between tweeting and citing research articles. 332-350 - Hao Peng, Misha Teplitskiy, David Jurgens:
Author mentions in science news reveal widespread disparities across name-inferred ethnicities. 351-365 - Juan Pablo Alperin, Alice Fleerackers, Michelle Riedlinger, Stefanie Haustein:
Second-order citations in altmetrics: A case study analyzing the audiences of COVID-19 research in the news and on social media. 366-382 - Evgeny Bobrov, Nico Riedel, Miriam Kip:
Operationalizing open and restricted-access data - Formulating verifiable criteria for the openness of data sets mentioned in biomedical research articles. 383-407 - Yury Kashnitsky, Guillaume Roberge, Jingwen Mu, Kevin Kang, Weiwei Wang, Maurice Vanderfeesten, Maxim Rivest, Savvas Chamezopoulos, Robert Jaworek, Maéva Vignes, Bamini Jayabalasingham, Finne Boonen, Chris James, Marius A. Doornenbal, Isabelle Labrosse:
Evaluating approaches to identifying research supporting the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. 408-425 - Andres F. Castro Torres, Aliakbar Akbaritabar:
The use of linear models in quantitative research. 426-446 - Antonio Perianes-Rodríguez, Antonio J. Gómez-Núñez, Carlos Olmeda-Gómez:
Anatomy of the top 1% most highly cited publications: An empirical comparison of two approaches. 447-463 - Amir Faghri, Theodore L. Bergman:
Highly Ranked Scholars and the influence of countries and regions in research fields, disciplines, and specialties. 464-483
- Enrique Herrera-Viedma, Wenceslao Arroyo-Machado, Daniel Torres-Salinas:
Losing objectivity: The questionable use of surveys in the Global Ranking of Academic Subjects. 484-486
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