1,704,278 research outputs found
Revisiting h measured on UK LIS and IR academics
A brief communication appearing in this journal ranked UK LIS and (some) IR academics by their h-index
using data derived from Web of Science. In this brief communication, the same academics were re-ranked,
using other popular citation databases. It was found that for academics who publish more in computer
science forums, their h was significantly different due to highly cited papers missed by Web of Science;
consequently their rank changed substantially. The study was widened to a broader set of UK LIS and IR
academics where results showed similar statistically significant differences. A variant of h, hmx, was
introduced that allowed a ranking of the academics using all citation databases together
Intuition in Healthcare Communication Practices: Initial Findings from a Qualitative Inquiry
This brief paper reports on how healthcare providers negotiate stages of care and communication by using intuition. This focus shifts attention away from the product-patient records-and towards the process of medical communication. To support this claim, the paper presents preliminary findings from qualitative analysis of two individual ethnographic research projects with live-action clinical nursing simulations and emergency medical services. Using a grounded theory analysis that identified intuitive moments in the writing practices of healthcare providers, this brief paper demonstrates how intuition manifests in all five stages of care-anticipate, assess, plan, act and reassess, and document-and grounds medical assessment and decision making. Analysis suggests three takeaways for healthcare communicators and educators: 1. intuitive work supports patient specific and responsive care; 2. coding and highlighting mediate patient sense; and 3. recognizing and valuing patient sense is a learned skill. The paper concludes with suggestions for reflective activities that could support incorporating intuition into healthcare communication pedagogy
Heavy-tailed statistics in short-message communication
Short-message (SM) is one of the most frequently used communication channels
in the modern society. In this Brief Report, based on the SM communication
records provided by some volunteers, we investigate the statistics of SM
communication pattern, including the interevent time distributions between two
consecutive short messages and two conversations, and the distribution of
message number contained by a complete conversation. In the individual level,
the current empirical data raises a strong evidence that the human activity
pattern, exhibiting a heavy-tailed interevent time distribution, is driven by a
non-Poisson nature.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures and 1 tabl
Universality of a mesenchymal transition signature in invasive solid cancers
In this brief communication, additional computational validation is provided consistent with the unifying hypothesis that a shared biological mechanism of mesenchymal transition, reflected by a precise gene expression signature, may be present in all types of solid cancers when they reach a particular stage of invasiveness
Matching MEDLINE/PubMed data with Web of Science (WoS): a routine in R language
We present a novel routine, namely medlineR, based on R language, that enables the user to match data from MEDLINE/PubMed with records indexed in the ISI Web of Science (WoS) database. The matching allows exploiting the rich and controlled vocabulary of Medical Sub- ject Headings (MeSH) of MEDLINE/PubMed with additional fields of WoS. The integration provides data (e.g. citation data, list of cited reference, list of the addresses of authors’ host organisations, WoS subject categories) to perform a variety of scientometric analyses. This brief communication describes medlineR, the methodology on which it relies, and the steps the user should follow to perform the matching across the two databases. In order to specify the differences from Leydesdorff and Opthof (2013), we conclude the brief communication by testing the routine on the case of the "Burgada Syndrome"
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