Publishing and impact 20141028

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Presentation for Wageningen University PhD course

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Publishing and ‘impact’

Information Literacy PhD students

Programme

Publishing

Metrics

●Article metrics

●Author metrics

●Journal metrics

●Research group metrics

Programme

Publishing

Metrics

●Article metrics

●Author metrics

●Journal metrics

●Research group metrics

Motives for publishing

Types of publications

Reports

Conference proceedings

Books/book chapters

Journals

●Professional journals

●Scholarly journals

(Scientific journals) Peer review

Peer review is the corner stone of scholarly quality control

●Publications

●Research proposals/grants

●Research institutions/universities

More info

●http://www.rin.ac.uk/peer-review-guide

●Course on Peer Review organized by WGS

Choosing the right journal to publish

Many factors influence journal selection

●Journal scope/Intended audience

●Editorial board/standing

●Open Access

●The speed of reviewing and publication

●Acceptance/Rejection rate

●Journal circulation

●Coverage in A&I databases (bibliographies)

●Journal performance

Open Access

OA publishing e.g. PLoS, BMC and Sage Open

Self-archiving in repositories e.g. Wageningen Yield (WaY)

SHERPA/RoMEO: Publisher copyright policies & self- archiving http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/

Directory of open access journals DOAJ (currently ca. 10,000 journals)

Be aware of predatory OA publishers

“Predatory publishers”

“Green” open access: deposit author versions to WaY

See: http://edepot.wur.nl/169331

Send your version of the article to: way.libray@wur.nl

Speed of publication

PLoS One

Euphytica

Rejection / acceptance rates

Sugimoto, C. R., Larivière, V., Ni, C., & Cronin, B. (2013). Journal acceptance rates: A cross-disciplinary analysis of variability

and relationships with journal measures. Journal of Informetrics, 7(4), 897–906. doi:10.1016/j.joi.2013.08.007

Rejection / acceptance rates

Rejection / acceptance rates

Making your publicatns known: networking

Making your publications known: cooperation

WTI2 report 2011

UNIV.Single Author

addressNational

copublicationInternational copublication

EUR 1.16 1.23 1.92RUG 1.15 1.19 1.62RUN 1.14 1.18 1.81TUD 1.27 1.12 1.36TUE 1.27 1.30 1.49LEI 1.18 1.26 1.72MAA 0.91 1.19 1.51TUT 1.20 1.32 1.42UU 1.83 1.28 1.74UVA 0.98 1.20 1.67TIU 1.09 0.98 1.19VU 1.21 1.26 1.66WUR 1.19 1.43 1.49Avg 1.20 1.23 1.58

Cooperation

Teams increasingly dominate solo authors in the production of knowledge. Research is increasingly done in teams across nearly all fields.

Teams typically produce more frequently cited research than individuals do, and this advantage has been increasing over time.

Teams now also produce the exceptionally high-impact research, even where that distinction was once the domain of solo authors.

Wuchty, S., B. F. Jones, et al. (2007). The increasing dominance of teams in production of knowledge. Science 316(5827): 1036-1039. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1136099

Additional information

http://wageningenur.nl/library

●Write & Cite a.o.

●Publishing and impact

●Copyright

●Open Access

●PhD theses submission

Advertise yourself

Cite your previous articles!

Be active at conferences

Cooperate with other people/research groups

Write, or expand, articles in the Wikipedia, refer to your thesis.

Blog or tweet about your research and thesis research

Make use of social networking tools (LinkedIn, Researchgate.net, Mendeley etc.)

Create author’s identifiers (ScopusID, Researcher ID, ORCID)

What's in a name

On the cover:

●Arina Schrier

First first title page:

●A.P. Schrier-Uyl

Second title page:

●Adriana Pia Uyl

In here own publication list

●A. Uyl

●A. Uijl

●A.P. Schrier Uyl

This also applies to the names of groups

Environmental Policy Group, Department of Social Sciences, Wageningen University

Environmental Policy Group, Wageningen University

Environmental Policy Group, Wageningen University and Research Centre

Environmental Policy Group, Wageningen UR

Get your affiliation right

For the university:

Chair group + Wageningen University

Plant Production Systems Group, Wageningen University, P.O. box ..., 6700 HA Wageningen, The Netherlands

For the institutes:

Institute + Wageningen University & Research Centre

Alterra, Wageningen University & Research Centre, P.O. box ..., 6700 HA Wageningen, The Netherlands

Exercises

Manual Chapter 9.8

●Exercise 1

Programme

Publishing

Metrics

●Article metrics

●Author metrics

●Journal metrics

●Research group metrics

Web of Science

Search:

●Articles are found based on Authors, Addresses, etc.

●For each article Times cited is presented

Cited reference search:

●Searches in the reference lists of records

●Not all of your articles are found. Non-cited articles are missing

Beeldvullende foto met titel

How do we compare numbers

Scientist Z. Math has a publication from 2003 with 17 citations

Scientist M. Biology has a publication from 2009 with 24 citations

Baselines for Mathematics

Baselines for Molecular Biology

0

100

200

300

400

0 2 4 6 8 10 12

Years after publication

Cu

mu

lati

ve

no

. c

ita

tio

ns Baseline

top 10%

top 1%

Citation enhanced A&I databases

Web of Science

● Based on ± 12000 journals

● Metrics: Impact factor

● Baselines per ‘discipline’ (ESI)

● Analysis tools (Insight)

Scopus

● Based on ± 19000 journals + other

publication types

● Metrics: SNIP and SJR

● Baselines + analysis tool (Scival)

Google Scholar (http://scholar.google.com)

● Based on unknown journals + many

other things

● No baselines

There are other citation enhanced databases: PsychInfo, SciFinder (Chemical abstracts)ArXiv (Physics)Spires (high energy physics)Citeseer (ICT)

Programme

Publishing

Metrics

●Article metrics

●Author metrics

●Research group metrics

Bibliometric indicators: An example

Kroes-Nijboer, A; Venema, P; Bouman, J; van der Linden, E (2009) The Critical Aggregation Concentration of beta-Lactoglobulin-Based Fibril Formation. Food Biophysics 4(2):59-63.

●Citations from WoS: 11

Journal: Food Biophysics

●Categorised by ESI in Agricultural Sciences

Baseline data for Agricultural Sciences.

●Article from 2009 in Agricultural Sciences:

●On average: 5.47 citations; top 10%: 14 citations; top 1%: 34 citations

Relative Impact: 11/5.47 = 2.01 Values June 2013

Essential Science Indicators (ESI)

Analytical database, covering 10 years + current year building

Comparisons between Countries, Institutes, Scientists and Journals

Hot papers / Highly cited papers

Research fronts

Baselines

ESI Baselines

Alternative to ESI: Scival (Elsevier)

Alternative to ESI: Scival (Elsevier)

Steps in a citation analysis

1. Look up the citation data (Web of Science)

2. Matching Journal(s) with appropriate research fields (Essential Science Indicators)

3. Collect baseline data (Essential Science Indicators)

4. Calculate the relative impact

Exercises

Manual Chapter 9.8

●Exercise 2: Number of publications and times cited

●Exercise 2.1

●Exercise 2.2 is optional

Exercises

Manual Chapter 9.8

●Exercise 3: Citation impact and rankings (Essential Science Indicators)

●Exercise 3.1a (3.1b optional)

Programme

Publishing

Metrics

●Article metrics

●Author metrics

●Journal metrics

●Research group metrics

H-index

Balance between productivity and citedness

To rule out the effect of one or two highly cited papers

Applicable to authors, journals, research groups, compounds, subjects etc.

But there are some serious doubts about robustness

Waltman, L. & N. J. van Eck (2011). The inconsistency of the h-index. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 63(2):406-415 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/asi.21678

H-index

Omnipresent h-index

54 47

57

Programme

Publishing

Metrics

●Article metrics

●Author metrics

●Journal metrics

●Research group metrics

Journal Performance Indicators

Journal performance indicators are based on citations to articles

Journal Citation Reports (JCR)

●a.o. standard Journal Impact Factors and 5-year Impact Factors

Scopus Journal Analyzer (SJA)

●a.o. SCImago Journal Rank (SJR) and Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP)

●Also available on http://journalmetrics.com/

Journal Citation Reports (JCR)

Reports three measures

Impact factor

Immediacy Index

Cited half life

Adapted from: Amin, M and Mabe, M. (2000) Impact factors: use and

abuse. Perspectives in Publishing, No. 1, 6 pp.

http://www.elsevier.com/framework_editors/pdfs/Perspectives1.pdf

IF in 2011 for Agricultural Systems

Selecting journals on the basis of IF

Word of warning

●Our opinion: Be careful when using Journal Impact factors to judge the performance of a group or individual scientist

●Used for NWO grant applications and Tenure track at Wageningen UR

Opthof, T. (1997) Sense and nonsense about he impact factor. Cardiovascular Research, 33(1): 1-7 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0008-6363(96)00215-5

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Exercises

Manual Chapter 9.8

●Exercise 4: Journal Citation Reports (JCR)

Programme

Publishing

Metrics

●Article metrics

●Author metrics

●Journal metrics

●Research group metrics

Journal quality and article impact 2003-2009, for Wageningen UR

Source: Wageningen Yield, Feb. 2012

Bibliometric analysis

Increase in share of Q1 articles at WageningenUR

Journal selection affects Relative Impact

Journal selection affects Relative Impact

2010

2011

2003

Interpretation of RI for small groups

With 10-50 publications per year

RI ≤ 0.8 : below world average impact

0.8 < RI ≤ 1.2 : world average impact

1.2 < RI ≤ 2.0 : above world average impact

2.0 < RI ≤ 3.0 : very good average impact

RI > 3.0 : excellent average impact

Exercises

●Exercise 5: (Group) Bibliometric analysis

Thank you!

http://www.slideshare.net/hugobesemer

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