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A journey through the scholarly publishing and evaluation landscape

A journey through the scholarly publishing and evaluation landscape. Themes and trends in research from global to individual scales. Sarah Huggett Publishing Information Manager, Scientometrics & Market Analysis, Research & Academic Relations 25 th September 2012.

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A journey through the scholarly publishing and evaluation landscape

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  1. A journey through the scholarly publishing and evaluation landscape Themes and trends in research from global to individual scales Sarah Huggett Publishing Information Manager, Scientometrics& Market Analysis, Research & Academic Relations 25th September 2012

  2. Our journey through the scholarly landscape

  3. The Global Scholarly Landscape Growth in output Mapping science

  4. Growth of scholarly communications ~3% per year

  5. Is more being published? 42m 28m

  6. Who is feeling the pressure to over publish? I feel pressurised to publish more research articles rather than fewer higher quality research articles All Subjects  n= 1,635  45%   USA France Russia China Germany Italy Canada Japan Spain UK

  7. Mapping science from web logs Bollen J, Van de Sompel H, Hagberg A, Bettencourt L, et al. (2009) Clickstream Data Yields High-Resolution Maps of Science. PLoS ONE 4(3): e4803. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0004803 http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0004803

  8. Mapping science from citations Richardson, M (2012), “Citography: the visualization of nineteen thousand journals through their recent citations”, Research Trends, issue 26 January 2012 http://www.researchtrends.com/issue26-january-2012/citography-the-visualization-of-nineteen-thousand-journals-through-their-recent-citations/

  9. National Perspectives Collaboration patterns Insights on Mexico

  10. Collaboration increases impact x2.0 x1.5 x1.7 x1.4 x1.4 x1.2 x2.0 x3.1

  11. International collaboration increases impact Collaborative papers with UK All papers from a country Field-weighted citation impact Less than world average > world but < UK average Greater than UK average

  12. Mobility increases impact Migratory researcher = permanent or returnee (2 or more years abroad) Transitory researcher = less than 2 years abroad Relative Productivity = articles per year relative to all USA researchers Relative Seniority = years of publication activity relative to all USA researchers

  13. Global migration patterns

  14. Mexico: output and international collaboration 8.3% per year 9.3% per year 40.5%

  15. Mexico SCImago Country Rank (Latin America)

  16. Mexico: Article Share & Field Weighted Relative Impact

  17. Mexico: Competencies 2011

  18. Institutional Evaluation SciVal Spotlight University Rankings

  19. UNAM Competencies 2011

  20. University Rankings

  21. QS University Rankings (Latin America)

  22. Academic Ranking of World Universities

  23. Leiden Rankings (North America)

  24. Leiden Rankings (Mexico)

  25. SCImago Institutions Rankings (Ibero-America)

  26. Bibliometrics for Authors The h-index SciVal Strata

  27. Author disambiguation issues ORCID is an international, interdisciplinary, open, and not-for-profit organization created for the benefit of all stakeholders, including research institutions, funding organizations, publishers, and researchers to enhance the scientific discovery process and improve collaboration and the efficiency of research funding. 46533489 Launch planned 2012 Q4

  28. The h-index Available on Scopus Rates individuals based on career publications Incorporates both citations and papers Productivity and age constraints Citations h g-index m-index etc. h Paper no.

  29. Mario J Molina, 1995 Chemistry Nobel Prize

  30. Mario J Molina, 1995 Chemistry Nobel Prize

  31. Mario J Molina, 1995 Chemistry Nobel Prize

  32. Mario J Molina, 1995 Chemistry Nobel Prize

  33. Mario J Molina, 1995 Chemistry Nobel Prize

  34. Mario J Molina, 1995 Chemistry Nobel Prize

  35. Article level metrics Citations Peer ratings Usage Social Media

  36. Citations: “a private process with a public face” “Reward or persuasion? The battle to define the meaning of a citation” Weinstock, M. Citation indexes. In A. Kent and H. Lancour (eds) Encyclopedia of Library & Information Science, Vol. 5, pp. 16-40 New York, Marcel Dekker, 1971. 15 reasons for citations What does a citation mean?

  37. Peer ratings

  38. Usage

  39. Social Media

  40. Social Media

  41. Our journey through the scholarly landscape Thank you for your attention Any questions or comments?

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