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Dhawan, S. M.
- Open Access to Knowledge and Information: Scholarly Literature and Digital Initiatives - The South Asian Scenario
Abstract Views :167 |
PDF Views:127
Authors
Affiliations
1 National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi - 110 012, IN
1 National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi - 110 012, IN
Source
World Digital Libraries, Vol 1, No 1 (2008), Pagination: 77-78Abstract
No Abstract.- Social Media and Libraries:A Scientometric Assessment of World Output, 2003-2014
Abstract Views :273 |
PDF Views:22
Authors
Affiliations
1 National Institute of Science, Technology and Development Studies, Dr K.S.Krishnan Marg, New Delhi - 110 012, IN
2 National Physical Lab, New Delhi, IN
3 Indian Institute of Science, Education and Research, Mohali - 140 306, Punjab, IN
1 National Institute of Science, Technology and Development Studies, Dr K.S.Krishnan Marg, New Delhi - 110 012, IN
2 National Physical Lab, New Delhi, IN
3 Indian Institute of Science, Education and Research, Mohali - 140 306, Punjab, IN
Source
Journal of Information and Knowledge (Formerly SRELS Journal of Information Management), Vol 53, No 1 (2016), Pagination: 1-10Abstract
The paper examines 1472 global publications on "social media and libraries" covering the period 2003-14 on a series of indicators. The publications output averaged 62% annual growth. These 1472 global publications received 5350 citations since their publication, averaging 1.68 citations per paper. Only 47.55% publications were cited one or more times. The contribution of top most productive countries (namely USA, U.K., Canada, Spain, Germany, China, Australia, India, Netherlands and Singapore) together accounted for 74.86% share. Netherlands registered the highest share (38.89%) of international collaborative papers among the top 10 countries during 2003-14. The top 15 organizations out of 293 accounted for 12.57% share. The top 10 authors out of 410 accounted for 4.96% share during 2003-14. Journals (57%) and conference proceedings (26.09%) contributed the largest share to global output during 2003-14. The top 15 journals contributed 290 publications(34.20%) during 2003-14. The top 10 most highly cited papers received 1094 citations, from 51 to 401 citations per paper. Blogs contributed the largest share (34.99%) of publications among social media sites, followed by Wikipedia (19.97%), Facebook (13.65%) and others.Keywords
Assessment, Citation Analysis, Library, Social Media, Scintometrics.References
- Social media (2015). Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_media on 6 April 2015.
- Kaplan, A.M. andHaenlein, M. (2010). Users of the world, unite! The challenges and opportunities of social media. Business Horizons, 53(1): 61.doi:10.1016/j.bushor.2009.09.003.
- Kietzmann, H.J. and Kristopher, H. (2011). Social media? Get serious! Understanding the functional building blocks of social media. Business Horizons, 54: 241–251. doi:10.1016/J.BUSHOR.2011.01.005.
- Davis, III C.H.; Deil-Amen, R.; Rios-Aguilar, C. and Gonzalez Canche, M.S. (2012). Social media in higher education: A literature review and research direction. Claremont Graduate University. Retrieved fromhttp//works.bepress.com/egi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1003&context=hfdavis(Accessed on 22 August 2014).
- Constantinides, E. and Fountain, S.J. (2008). Web 2.0: Cenceptual foundation and marketing issues. Journal of Direct, Data and Digital Marketing Practice, 9(3): 231–244.
- White, M.G. (2006-15). What Types of Social Networks Exist?Retrieved from http://webcache.googleusercontent.co/search?q=cache:mzNacrIimegJ:socialnetworking.lovetoknow.com/What_Types_of_Social_Networks_Exist+& cd=13&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=in
- Rutherford, L.L. (2008). Building participative library services: The impact of social software use in public libraries.Library High Tech, 26(3): 411–423.
- Tiffen, B. and England, A. (2011) Engaging with clients and personalizing services at UTS Library: Measuring the value of libraries and their clients. The Australian Library Journal, 60(3): 237–247.
- Mack, D.;Behler, A.B.R. and Rimland, E. (2007). Reaching students with Facebook: Data and best practices.Electronic Journal of Academic & Special Librarianship, 8(2). Retrieved from. http://southernlibrarianship.icaap.org/content/ v08n02/mack_d01.htmlon 6 July 2015
- Phillips, N.K. (2011). Academic library use of Facebook: Building relationship with students. Journal of Academic Librarianship, 37(6): 512–522.
- Xia, Z.D. (2009). Marketing library services through face book groups. Library Management, 30(6-7): 469–47.
- London, L. and Hall, H. (2010). From triviality to business tool: The case of Twitter in library and information services delivery. Business Information Review, 27(4): 236–241.
- Breeding, M. (2009).Social networking strategies for professionals. Computers in Libraries October, 29(9): 29–31.
- Hall, H.(2011). Relationship and role transformations in social media environments. The Electronic Library, 29(4): 421–28.
- Bradley, P. (2015). Social media for creative libraries: How to maximise Impact and Reach. London; Facet Publishing. July 2015.
- American Library Association. (2012). State of America’s Libraries Report 2012.Section on social networking. Chicago. 2012, p. 34.
- Jain, P. (2014). Application of social media in marketing library and information services: A global perspective. International Journal of Academic Research and Reflection, 2(2): 25.
- Khan, S.A. andBhatti, R. (2012). Application of social media in marketing of library and information services: A case study from Pakistan. Webology, 9(1). Retrieved from http://www.webology.org/2012/v9n1/a93.html
- Taylor and Francis Group. (2014). Use of social media by library: Current practices and future opportunities. October 2014.
- Coursaris, C.K. and Van Osch, W. (2014). A scientometric analysis of social media research(2004-2011). Scientometrics, 101(1): 357–389.
- Chunmei, G. and Weijun, W. (2014). A Bibliometric Analysis of Social Media Research from the Perspective of Library and Information Science. Digital Services and Information Intelligence. IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology 445:23–32.
- RFID Technology and Libraries:A Bibliometric Assessment of Global Literature during 2002-14
Abstract Views :313 |
PDF Views:20
Authors
Affiliations
1 A C Joshi Library, Panjab University, Chandigarh - 160014, Punjab, IN
2 National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi - 110012, IN
3 Sri Venkateswara University, Tirupati - 517502, Andhra Pradesh, IN
1 A C Joshi Library, Panjab University, Chandigarh - 160014, Punjab, IN
2 National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi - 110012, IN
3 Sri Venkateswara University, Tirupati - 517502, Andhra Pradesh, IN
Source
Journal of Information and Knowledge (Formerly SRELS Journal of Information Management), Vol 53, No 2 (2016), Pagination: 89-98Abstract
The present study examines the world publications output (205) on "RFID Technology and Libraries" published during 2002-14, using a series of bibliometric indicators. The world output on 'RFID Technology and Libraries' registered 5.04% annual average growth and citation impact of 3.91 citations per paper in 13 years. The distribution of world publication output is skewed. The top 8 most productive countries (out of a total of 35) alone accounted for 67.32% world share. The top 8 countries which include - China, USA, Japan, Taiwan, India, South Korea, Malaysia and U.K. - accounted for 42.20% world citations share. However, the distribution of world output is widely scattered across 158 participating organizations. The top 14 organizations accounted for just 23.41% world publication share and 21.22% world citation share. The distribution of world output is also scattered widely across 139 authors. The top 15 authors accounted for just 23.41% world publication share and 17.73% world citation share. RFID applications into computer science was the largest (52.20% share), followed by social sciences (36.10%), engineering (33.66%), business, management and accounting (5.85) and biochemistry, genetics and molecular biology (3.90%) during 2002-14. The top17 highly cited papers were individually cited from 10 to 286 times in 13 years since their publication year. The USA contributed 7 highly cited papers and Hong Kong, India, Switzerland and Taiwan contributed 2 each and Japan, South Korea and Jamaica 1 each.Keywords
RFID, Radio Frequency Identification, Publications, Applications, Libraries, Bibliometrics, Scientometrics.References
- Boss, R.W. RFID Technology. PLA Technical note. Retreived from: http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/pla/tools/technotes/rfidtechnology.cfm
- Boss, R.W. (2003). RFID technology for libraries. Library Technology Reports, (Monograph)
- Anuragi, M. (2014). RFID technology for libraries: An Indian scenario. International Journal for Research in Applied Science and Engineering Technology. 2(2): 60–65.
- Paul Pandian, M. (2010). RFID for libraries: practical guide. Oxford: Chandosh Publishing.
- Chao, C. C., et al. (2005). Determining the technology trends and forecasts of RFID by a historical review and bibliometric analysis from 1991 to 2005. Technovation. 27(5): 268–79.
- Asif, Z & Mandviwalla, M. (2008). Integrating the supply chain with RFID: A technical and business analysis. Communications of the Association of Information System. Retreived from: http://www.bauer.uh.edu/rfid/Spring2006/RFI-Tutorial.pdf
- Frequently Asked Questions. RFID Journal. Retrieved from: http://www.rfidjournal.com/faq/
- Lewis, S. (2005). A basic introduction to RFID technology and its use in the supply chain. Retrieved from: http://www.printronix.com/library/assets/public/case-studies/rfid-laran-white-paper-english.pdf
- JESIC Technology Limited. (2008). Radio Frequency Identification (RFID). Retrieved from: http://www.jesic-tech.com/RFID.html
- Ahson, S. & Ilyas, M. (2008). RFID Handbook: Applications, technology, security and privacy. Boca Raton: CRC Press.
- Singh, J.; Brar, N. & Fong, C. (2006). The state of RFID applications in libraries. Information Technology and Libraries. 25(1): 24–32. DOI: 10.6017/ital.v25i1.3326.
- Nagai, E. W. T.; Moon, K. K. L.; Riggins, F.J. & Yi, C. Y. (2008). RFID research: An academic literature review (1995-2005) and future research directions. International Journal of Production Economics. 12: 510–520.
- Irania, Z; Gunasekaranb, A. & Dwivedi, Y. K. (2010). Radio frequency identification (RFID): research trends and framework. International Journal of Production Research. 48(9): 2485–2511.
- Singh, N.K. & Mahajan, P. (2014). RFID and it's use in libraries: A literature review. International Journal of Information Dissemination and Technology. 4(2): 117–123.
- Scientometric Assessment of Indian Publications on Rare Earths during 2005-14
Abstract Views :250 |
PDF Views:6
Authors
Affiliations
1 National Physical Lab., New Delhi, IN
2 National Institute of Science, Technology and Development Studies, New Delhi 110 012, IN
3 S. V. University, Tirupati, IN
1 National Physical Lab., New Delhi, IN
2 National Institute of Science, Technology and Development Studies, New Delhi 110 012, IN
3 S. V. University, Tirupati, IN
Source
Journal of Information and Knowledge (Formerly SRELS Journal of Information Management), Vol 53, No 4 (2016), Pagination: 271-279Abstract
This paper analyzes India's research output in rare earths on a series of scientometric indicators. India published a total of 11,838 publications in the area of rare earths in 10 years during 2005-14 registering an average annual growth of 11.38%, citation impact of 7.44 citations per paper, and accounted for 5.18% global publications in rare earths for the period ranking as the 6th most productive country in the world. The paper profiles 15 most productive countries in rare earths, 20 most productive organizations and 20 most productive authors on a series of indicators including global publications share, global citation share, average productivity, citations per paper, h-index, and share of international collaborative papers during 2005-14. The paper also identifies top 20 most productive journals reporting India's research in rare earths during 2005-14. Suggests the needs for developing a national policy for catalyzing R& D on rare earths research in the country, increased investments in R& D, identification of areas of strategic interest and identification of top R& D institutions wherein future research could be conducted.Keywords
India, Rare Earths, Scientometrics.References
- Rare earth elements.31 May 2015.http://en.wikipedia.org/ wiki/Rare_earth_element (Accesses on February 15, 2015)
- UNCTAD. Commodities at a Glance. New York and Geneva.2014. Special Issue on Rare Earths, No.5. Scarce supply – the word’s rare earth metal producers. 3 July 2014.http://www.mining-technology.com/features/featurescarcesupplythe-worlds-biggest-rare-earth-metal-producers4298126/ (Accesses on February 20, 2015)
- Rare Earth Technology Alliance. What are rare earths? 2013-15. American Chemical Council, Inc. http://www.rareearthtechalliance.com/What-are-Rare-Earths( Accesses on 25 February 2015)
- Rare earth elements. http://www.periodni.com/rare_earth_ elements.html (Accesses on 25 February 2015)
- Barth, Andreas and Marx, Werner. (1979). Stimulation of ideas through compound-based bibliometrics: Counting and mapping chemical compounds for analyzing research topics in chemistry, physics, and materials science. Scientometrics, 1(4):339-57
- Brozek, V. and Karen, P. (1979). Dynamics of information flow in the field of rare earth carbide research. Scientometrics, 1(4):339-57.
- Adachi, Gin-ya, Imanaka, Nobuhito and Tamura, Shinji. (2010). Research trends in rare earths: A preliminary analysis. Journal of Rare Earths, 28(6):843-46
- Ju, Yonghan and Sohn, So Young. (2015). Identifying patterns in rare earth elements patents based on text and data mining. Scientometrics, 102(1):389-410.