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Garg, K. C.
- Scientometric profile of organic chemistry research in India during 2004–2013
Abstract Views :263 |
PDF Views:96
Authors
Affiliations
1 Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, 221 005, IN
2 CSIR-National Institute of Science Technology and Development Studies, Dr K.S. Krishnan Marg, New Delhi 110 012, IN
1 Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, 221 005, IN
2 CSIR-National Institute of Science Technology and Development Studies, Dr K.S. Krishnan Marg, New Delhi 110 012, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 109, No 5 (2015), Pagination: 869-877Abstract
An analysis of 17,344 papers published by Indian scientists and indexed by Web of Science in the discipline of organic chemistry and its sub-disciplines during 2004-2013 indicates that the Indian output has increased significantly in the later period. Academic institutions contributed about 46% of the total output followed by the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) with 26% of the total output. The most prolific institutions among them mainly belonging to academic institutions and CSIR contributed about 60% of the total output. The value of citation per paper for most of the prolific institutions was higher than the Indian average. Similar trend was observed for the relative citation impact. Indian researchers in the discipline of organic chemistry published their papers in international journals with impact factor greater than 1. About 11% of the papers published by Indian scientists in the discipline of organic chemistry during 2004-2013 remained uncited.Keywords
Bibliometric indicators, citation analysis, organic chemistry, scientometricsReferences
- MacCoss, M. and Baillie, T. A., Organic chemistry in drug discovery. Science, 2004, 303(5665), 1810–1813.
- Varaprasad, S. J. D. and Ramesh, D. B., Activity and growth of chemical research in India during 1987–2007. DESIDOC J. Libr.Inf. Technol., 2011, 31, 387–394.
- Guay, Y., Emergence of basic research on the periphery: organic chemistry in India, 1907–1926. Scientometrics, 1986, 10,77–94.
- Nagpaul, P. S. and Pant, N., Cross-national assessment of specialization patterns in chemistry. Scientometrics, 1993, 27, 215–235.
- Karki, M. M. S. and Garg, K. C., Scientometrics of Indian organic chemistry research. Scientometrics, 1999, 45, 107–116.
- Karki, M. M. S., Garg, K. C. and Sharma, P., Activity and growth of organic chemistry research in India during 1971–1989. Scientometrics,2000, 49, 279–288.
- Karki, M. M. S. and Garg, K. C., Bibliometrics of alkaloid chemistry Research in India. J. Chem. Inf. Comput. Sci., 1997, 37, 157–161.
- Kumari, G. L., Synthetic organic chemistry research: analysis by scientometric indicators. Scientometrics, 2009, 80, 559–570.
- Jain, A., Garg, K. C., Sharma, P. and Kumar, S., Impact of SERC’s funding on research in chemical sciences. Scientometrics,1998, 41, 357–370.
- Garg, K. C., Kumar, S. and Dutt, B., Impact of SERC’s funding on research. Curr. Sci., 2007, 93, 1114–1121.
- Salini, C. P., Nishi, P., Vishnumaya, R. S. and Mini, S., A bibliometric evaluation of organic chemistry research in India. Ann. Lib. Inf. Stud., 2014, 61, 332–342.
- Nishi, P., Parvatharajan, P. and Prathap, G., Visibility and impact of the Indian Journal of Chemistry Section B during 2005–2009 using scientometric techniques. Indian J. Chem. Sect. B, 2012, 51,269–284.
- Nagaiah, K. and Srimannarayana, G., Publications in organic chemistry from Indian universities and laboratories. Curr. Sci., 2015, 105, 176–183.
- Garg, K. C. and Kumar, S., Scientometric profile of Indian science as seen through Science Citation Index Expanded 2010–2011, SRELS J. Inf. Manage., 2013, 50, 529–542.
- Uncitedness of Indian Scientific Output
Abstract Views :256 |
PDF Views:87
Authors
K. C. Garg
1,
S. Kumar
1
Affiliations
1 CSIR-National Institute of Science, Technology and Development Studies, Dr K. S. Krishnan Marg, New Delhi 110 012, IN
1 CSIR-National Institute of Science, Technology and Development Studies, Dr K. S. Krishnan Marg, New Delhi 110 012, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 107, No 6 (2014), Pagination: 965-970Abstract
An analysis of 35,640 papers published by Indian scientists as journal articles and reviews in journals indexed by Science Citation Index-Expanded (SCI-E) in 2008 revealed that 6231 (17.5%) papers remained uncited during 2008-2013. Most of the uncited papers were published by State Agricultural Universities and the Indian Council of Agricultural Research. The highest proportion of uncited papers was in the discipline of agricultural sciences followed by multidisciplinary and mathematical sciences. These uncited papers appeared in journals published from India, Singapore, Romania and Japan with low impact factor (IF). Lowest number of uncited papers was published by the Department of Biotechnology. It was also found that a small fraction of papers published in journals with IF more than 5 also remained uncited.Keywords
Citation Analysis, Scientific Output, Scientometrics, Uncitedness.- Publication Delay of Manuscripts in Periodicals Published by CSIR-NISCAIR
Abstract Views :245 |
PDF Views:93
Authors
Affiliations
1 CSIR-National Institute of Science, Technology and Development Studies, Dr K. S. Krishnan Marg, New Delhi 110 012, IN
1 CSIR-National Institute of Science, Technology and Development Studies, Dr K. S. Krishnan Marg, New Delhi 110 012, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 111, No 12 (2016), Pagination: 1924-1928Abstract
Publishing in scholarly peer-reviewed journals causes long delays from submission to its subsequent publication. This may be due to the long peer-review process or backlog of manuscripts waiting in line in the journals. The present study examines the publication delay in 13 journals published by CSIR-NISCAIR at three different stages. These were delays between receipt of manuscript and its revision, editorial delay, revision and its subsequent publication, i.e. technical delay, and the total delay. The study examined 1223 articles published in these 13 journals in the year 2015, except for 1 journal for which data for 2104 have been used. The analysis indicates that the publication delay varied from one discipline to another and from one journal to another journal. The highest time delay was found to be for the Indian Journal of Chemical Technology, and lowest for the Indian Journal of Chemistry - A. The total publication delay varied between 5.2 and 22.4 months. In most of the journals, the reason for delay was technical.Keywords
Scholarly Publishing, Review Time, Peer-Reviewed Journals, Technical and Editorial Delay.- Scientometric Profile of Global Male Breast Cancer Research
Abstract Views :286 |
PDF Views:77
Authors
Affiliations
1 Department of Library and Information Sciences, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi 221 005, IN
2 CSIR-National Institute of Science, Technology and Development Studies, Dr K.S. Krishnan Marg, New Delhi 110 012, IN
1 Department of Library and Information Sciences, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi 221 005, IN
2 CSIR-National Institute of Science, Technology and Development Studies, Dr K.S. Krishnan Marg, New Delhi 110 012, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 112, No 09 (2017), Pagination: 1814-1821Abstract
An analysis of 4165 papers published during 2005-2014 on male breast cancer and indexed by Science Citation Index-Expanded indicates that the publication output in this nascent field is increasing steadily. The output is scattered among 91 countries, and USA ranks first in the publication output as well as impact in terms of citations per paper (CPP) and relative citation impact (RCI). The global compound annual growth rate during the period of study is 6.2. Change in transformative activity index is highest for the People's Republic of China (PRC). However, impact of research output is low for PRC. The research output is highly scattered in terms of prolific institutions, authors and journals publishing research results. Most of the prolific institutions are located in USA. Among the prolific institutions, the highest value of CPP and RCI was for Massachusetts General Hospital (USA), and among authors the highest value of CPP and RCI was for Thompson D. from the University of Cambridge (England).Keywords
Citation Analysis, Male Breast Cancer, Publication Output, Scientometric Assessment, Transformative Activity Index.References
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- Nazir, T., Samriya, S. and Debba, F., Scientometric study of BRCA (breast cancer) research: an assessment of publication and country share, growth rate and h-index. Res. Rev.: J. Oncol. Haematol., 2015, 4, 5–17.
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- Guan, J. and Ma, N., A comparative study of research performance in computer science. Scientometrics, 2004, 61(3), 339–359.
- Karki, M. M. S. and Garg, K. C., Bibliometrics of alkaloid chemistry research in India. J. Chem. Inf. Comput. Sci., 1997, 37, 157–161.
- Kumar, S. and Garg, K. C., Scientometrics of computer science research in India and China. Scientometrics, 2005, 64, 121–132.
- Dwivedi, S., Kumar, S. and Garg, K. C., Scientometric profile of organic chemistry research in India during 2004–2013. Curr. Sci., 2015, 109, 869–877.
- Garg, K. C., Kumar, S., Madhavi, Y. and Bahl, M., Bibliometrics of global malaria vaccine research. Health Inf. Lib. J., 2009, 26, 22–31.
- Dutt, B., Kumar, S. and Garg, K. C., Scientometric profile of global dengue research, COLLNET. J. Scientometrics Inf. Manage., 2010, 4, 81–91.
- Collaboration Patterns of Indian Scientists in Organic Chemistry
Abstract Views :251 |
PDF Views:68
Authors
Affiliations
1 CSIR-National Institute of Science, Technology and Development Studies, Dr K. S. Krishnan Marg, New Delhi 110 012, IN
2 Department of Library and Information Science, University of Delhi, Delhi 110 007, IN
1 CSIR-National Institute of Science, Technology and Development Studies, Dr K. S. Krishnan Marg, New Delhi 110 012, IN
2 Department of Library and Information Science, University of Delhi, Delhi 110 007, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 114, No 06 (2018), Pagination: 1174-1180Abstract
An analysis of 17,344 papers published by Indian scientists and indexed by Web of Science in the discipline of organic chemistry during 2004–2013 indicates that collaborative coefficient has increased during the later years (2011–2013). Of the total published papers, 6312 (36.4%) were due to domestic and international collaboration. The share of papers in domestic collaboration was 77.3% (4882) and international collaboration was 22.7% (1430). Among the international collaborating countries, India had published highest number of papers with the USA followed by Germany. Academic institutions followed by Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) contributed the highest number of papers in domestic as well as in international collaboration. However, the value of domestic collaborative index and international collaborative index was less than 100 for both the sectors. The labs funded by CSIR also topped the list of institutions having domestic and international collaborative papers. The compound annual growth rate in domestic and international collaborative papers was 4.7 and 5.3 respectively. The value of domestic collaborative index was highest for CSIR-CDRI, Lucknow and international collaborative index for Madurai Kamaraj University, Madurai.Keywords
Academic Institutions, Collaboration Pattern, Collaborative Index, Organic Chemistry.References
- National Science Board, Science and Engineering Indicators 1998. National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA, USA, 1998, pp. 5–43, 5–44, A-310 and Appendix Table 5-52.
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- Glanzel, W., Schubert, A. and Czerwon, H. J., A bibliometrtic analysis of international scientific cooperation of the European Union (1985–1995). Scientometrics, 1999, 45(2), 185–202.
- Basu, A. and Vinu Kumar, B. S., International collaboration in Indian scientific papers. Scientometrics, 2000, 48(3), 381–402.
- Prakasan, E. R. et al., Scientometric facts on the international collaborative Indian publications, Curr. Sci., 2014, 106(2), 166–169.
- Gupta, B. M., Munshi, U. M. and Mishra, P. K., S&T collaboration of India with other South Asian countries. Curr. Sci., 2002, 83(10), 1201–1209.
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- Garg, K. C. and Padhi, P., A study of collaboration in laser science and technology. Scientometrics, 2001, 51(2), 415–427.
- Dutt, B. and Nikam, K., Scientometrics of collaboration pattern in solar cell research in India. Ann. Lib. Infor. Stud., 2014, 61(1), 65–73.
- Bibliometric study of India’s scientific publication outputs during 2001–10: evidence for changing trends, Department of Science and Technology, DST, New Delhi, July 2012; http://www.nstmisdst.org/PDF/Evidencesofchangingtrends.pdf (accessed on 22 October 2017).
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- Garg, K. C. and Dwivedi, S., Pattern of collaboration in the discipline of Japanese encephalitis, DESIDOC J. Libr. Inf. Technol., 2014, 34(3), 241–247.
- Owusu-Nimo, F. and Boshoff, N., Research collaboration in Ghana: patterns, motives and roles, Scientometrics, 2017, 110(3), 1099–1121; doi:10.1007/s11192-016-2221-x.
- Dwivedi, S., Kumar and Garg, K. C., Scientometric profile of organic chemistry research in India during 2004–2013, Curr. Sci., 2015, 109(5), 869–877.
- Ajiferuke, I., Burrel, Q. and Tague, J., Collaborative coefficient: a single measure of the degree of collaboration in research. Scientometrics, 1988, 14(5–6), 421–433.
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- Collaboration Pattern in Male Breast Cancer Research
Abstract Views :275 |
PDF Views:75
Authors
Affiliations
1 Department of Library & Information Sciences, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi - 221005, IN
2 CSIR-National Institute of Science Technology and Development Studies, Dr. K.S. Krishnan Marg, New Delhi - 110012, IN
1 Department of Library & Information Sciences, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi - 221005, IN
2 CSIR-National Institute of Science Technology and Development Studies, Dr. K.S. Krishnan Marg, New Delhi - 110012, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 115, No 5 (2018), Pagination: 845-850Abstract
An analysis of 4168 research papers on male breast cancer (MBC) published by different countries and indexed by Science Citation Index Expanded during 2005–2014 indicates that only 15% of the papers were non-collaborative and the rest were published either in domestic or international collaboration. The sub-field of MBC had a high proportion of domestic collaboration. The number of papers written with domestic collaboration was almost three times the number of papers written with international collaboration. The value of co-authorship index (CAI) decreased in single-, twoand multi-authored papers in the second block 2010–2014 as compared to the first block (2005– 2009). Higher value of CAI for mega-authored papers reflects higher collaborative coefficient (CC) in 2010–2014. The highest value of CC is for the sub-field S9 (genetics and heredity). This is also indicated by the highest value of CAI for mega-authored papers in this subfield. Among 17 highly productive institutions, CC value is more or equal to the global value of CC for 10 prolific institutions.Keywords
International Collaboration, Male Breast Cancer, Research Publications.References
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- Basu, A. and Kumar, B. S. V., International collaboration in Indian scientific papers. Scientometrics, 2000, 48(3), 381–402.
- Garg, K. C. and Dwivedi, S., Pattern of collaboration in the discipline of Japanese encephalitis. DESIDOC J. Lib. Infor. Technol., 2014, 34(3), 241–247.
- Gupta, B. M. and Karisiddappa, C. R., Collaboration in theoretical population genetics speciality. Scientometrics, 1998, 42(3), 349– 376.
- Garg, K. C. and Padhi, P., A study of collaboration in laser science and technology. Scientometrics, 2001, 51(2), 415–427.
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- Dwivedi, S., Garg, K. C. and Prasad, H. N., Scientometric profile of global male breast cancer research. Curr. Sci., 2017, 112(9), 1814–1821.
- Ajiferuke, I., Burrel, Q. and Tague, J., Collaborative coefficient: a single measure of the degree of collaboration in research. Scientometrics, 1988, 14(5–6), 421–433.
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