Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Journal of Information Science
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
The relationship between citations and number of downloads in Decision Support Systems
Decision Support Systems
Webometric analysis of departments of librarianship and information science: a follow-up study
Journal of Information Science
Scientometric analysis of the CHI proceedings
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Semantic Web: Who is who in the field - a bibliometric analysis
Journal of Information Science
Relative status of journal and conference publications in computer science
Communications of the ACM
Popular and/or prestigious? Measures of scholarly esteem
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
Mining citation information from CiteSeer data
Scientometrics
Multiple open access availability and citation impact
Journal of Information Science
Invisible work in standard bibliometric evaluation of computer science
Communications of the ACM
Proceedings of the 11th ACM symposium on Document engineering
Visualizing and mapping the intellectual structure of information retrieval
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
Trend and efficiency analysis of co-authorship network
Scientometrics
Harnessing user library statistics for research evaluation and knowledge domain visualization
Proceedings of the 21st international conference companion on World Wide Web
A study of factors that affect the information-seeking behavior of academic scientists
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
The Hirsch index and related impact measures
Annual Review of Information Science and Technology
Science is all in the eye of the beholder: Keyword maps in Google scholar citations
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Scientific publishing in Benin as seen from Scopus
Scientometrics
Evaluating a department's research: Testing the Leiden methodology in business and management
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
Effects of physician collaboration network on hospital outcomes
HIKM '12 Proceedings of the Fifth Australasian Workshop on Health Informatics and Knowledge Management - Volume 129
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The Institute for Scientific Information's (ISI, now Thomson Scientific, Philadelphia, PA) citation databases have been used for decades as a starting point and often as the only tools for locating citations and/or conducting citation analyses. The ISI databases (or Web of Science [WoS]), however, may no longer be sufficient because new databases and tools that allow citation searching are now available. Using citations to the work of 25 library and information science (LIS) faculty members as a case study, the authors examine the effects of using Scopus and Google Scholar (GS) on the citation counts and rankings of scholars as measured by WoS. Overall, more than 10,000 citing and purportedly citing documents were examined. Results show that Scopus significantly alters the relative ranking of those scholars that appear in the middle of the rankings and that GS stands out in its coverage of conference proceedings as well as international, non-English language journals. The use of Scopus and GS, in addition to WoS, helps reveal a more accurate and comprehensive picture of the scholarly impact of authors. The WoS data took about 100 hours of collecting and processing time, Scopus consumed 200 hours, and GS a grueling 3,000 hours. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.