All Stories

  1. Correction: Using the weighted Lorenz curve to represent balance in collaborations: the BIC indicator
  2. The modified repeat rate described within a thermodynamic framework
  3. Large language models and scientific publishing
  4. Confidence Intervals for Relative Intensity of Collaboration (RIC) Indicators
  5. A proposal for the peer review procedure for funding decisions
  6. Using the weighted Lorenz curve to represent balance in collaborations: the BIC indicator
  7. Do elite scientists play a key role in the genesis of transformative research of “sparking type”? An investigation in the science of science
  8. A bibliometric study of the work of Rosalind E. Franklin (1920-1958)
  9. Measuring the relative intensity of collaboration within a network
  10. Mathematical reflections on Triple Helix calculations
  11. “Sparking” and “Igniting” Key Publications of 2020 Nobel Prize Laureates
  12. COVID-19, the Yule-Simpson paradox and research evaluation
  13. BIBLIOMETRIC TECHNIQUES AND THEIR USE IN BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS RESEARCH
  14. Naukometriya, Nalimov and Mul’chenko
  15. Bilateral Co-authorship Indicators Based on Fractional Counting
  16. The h-index formalism
  17. Describing Citations as a Function of Time
  18. Not cited is not the same as not interesting: an example
  19. Nobel Prize winners 2016: Igniting or sparking foundational publications?
  20. Corrigendum to “Is the expertise of evaluation panels congruent with the research interests of the research groups: A quantitative approach based on barycenters” [Journal of Informetrics 9 (4) (2015) 704–721]
  21. Scientific influence is not always visible: The phenomenon of under-cited influential publications
  22. Using h-cores to study the most-cited articles of the twenty-first century
  23. Interrelations among scientific fields and their relative influences revealed by an input–output analysis
  24. Unnormalized and normalized forms of gefura measures in directed and undirected networks
  25. Comments on “Impact coverage of the success-index” by Leo Egghe
  26. Otlet: Forgotten founder of bibliometrics
  27. Egghe'sg-index is not a proper concentration measure
  28. An interpolated h-index
  29. Calculating the Outgrow Index and Similar Structural Indicators: A simple Software Program for Visualizing Outcomes
  30. Averages of impact factors : general contribution
  31. A multi-metric approach for research evaluation
  32. Interestingness and the essence of citation
  33. Basic independence axioms for the publication-citation system
  34. A continuous description of discrete data points in informetrics
  35. A framework for knowledge integration and diffusion
  36. A formal relation between the h-index of a set of articles and their I3 score
  37. The ASIS&T–ISSI “metrics” pre-conference seminar and the Global Alliance
  38. Aggregation properties of relative impact and other classical indicators: Convexity issues and the Yule-Simpson paradox
  39. On indexing in the Web of Science and predicting journal impact factor
  40. Reflections on recent developments of the h-index and h-type indices
  41. Yield sequences as journal attractivity indicators: “payback times” for Science and Nature
  42. The R- and AR-indices: Complementing the h-index
  43. A. Asonuma, Y. Fang and R. Rousseau, ‘Reflections on the age distribution of Japanese scientists’.Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology57(3) 2006, 342–346
  44. Q-measures for binary divided networks: An investigation within the field of informetrics
  45. Diffusion factors
  46. Reflections on the age distribution of Japanese scientists
  47. Key labs and open labs in the Chinese scientific research system: qualitative and quantitative evaluation indicators
  48. Robert Fairthorne and the empirical power laws
  49. Escher Staircases on the World Wide Web
  50. The role of China's English-language scientific journals in scientific communication
  51. Rejoinder: In defense of formal methods
  52. Elementary Statistics for Effective Library and Information Service Management
  53. Size-frequency and rank-frequency relations, power laws and exponentials: a unified approach
  54. Observations concerning the two‐ and three‐year synchronous impact factor, based on the Chinese science citation database
  55. The center of China
  56. Indicadores bibliométricos e econométricos para a avaliação de instituições científicas
  57. Jaccard similarity leads to the Marczewski-Steinhaus topology for information retrieval
  58. Duality in information retrieval and the hypergeometric distribution
  59. Spectral methods for detecting periodicity in library circulation data: A case study
  60. DO A FIELD LIST OF INTERNATIONALLY VISIBLE JOURNALS AND THEIR JOURNAL IMPACT FACTORS DEPEND ON THE INITIAL SET OF JOURNALS? A RESEARCH PROPOSAL
  61. Generalized success-breeds-success principle leading to time-dependent informetric distributions
  62. THE NUMBER OF AUTHORS PER ARTICLE IN LIBRARY AND INFORMATION SCIENCE CAN OFTEN BE DESCRIBED BY A SIMPLE PROBABILITY DISTRIBUTION
  63. A Prediction of the Potential Interlending Demand in the European Community
  64. The Fussler sampling technique
  65. THE NUCLEAR ZONE OF A LEIMKUHLER CURVE
  66. On relative indexing in fuzzy retrieval systems
  67. Evaluation of Research Performance and Scientometric Indicators in China
  68. From a Success Index to a Success Multiplier