Semantic community Web portals
Proceedings of the 9th international World Wide Web conference on Computer networks : the international journal of computer and telecommunications netowrking
An XML Log Standard and Tool for Digital Library Logging Analysis
ECDL '02 Proceedings of the 6th European Conference on Research and Advanced Technology for Digital Libraries
DCMI '01 Proceedings of the International Conference on Dublin Core and Metadata Applications 2001
Developing Semantic Web Services
Developing Semantic Web Services
The bibliometric properties of article readership information: Research Articles
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Toward alternative metrics of journal impact: a comparison of download and citation data
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal - Special issue: Infometrics
Earlier Web usage statistics as predictors of later citation impact: Research Articles
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
An architecture for the aggregation and analysis of scholarly usage data
Proceedings of the 6th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
The largest scholarly semantic network...ever.
Proceedings of the 16th international conference on World Wide Web
MESUR: usage-based metrics of scholarly impact
Proceedings of the 7th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
Towards usage-based impact metrics: first results from the mesur project.
Proceedings of the 8th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
Integration and warehousing of social metadata for search and assessment of scientific knowledge
SocInfo'11 Proceedings of the Third international conference on Social informatics
Annual Review of Information Science and Technology
Hi-index | 0.00 |
The large-scale analysis of scholarly artifact usage is constrained primarily by current practices in usage data archiving, privacy issues concerned with the dissemination of usage data, and the lack of a practical ontology for modeling the usage domain. As a remedy to the third constraint, this article presents a scholarly ontology that was engineered to represent those classes for which large-scale bibliographic and usage data exists, supports usage research, and whose instantiation is scalable to the order of 50 million articles along with their associated artifacts (e.g. authors and journals) and an accompanying 1 billion usage events. The real world instantiation of the presented abstract ontology is a semantic network model of the scholarly community which lends the scholarly process to statistical analysis and computational support. We present the ontology, discuss its instantiation, and provide some example inference rules for calculating various scholarly artifact metrics.