2 research outputs found

    Exploiting Semantic Similarity Between Citation Contexts For Direct Citation Weighting And Residual Citation

    Get PDF
    This study used the semantic similarity between citation contexts to develop one scheme for weighting direct citations, and another scheme for allocating residual citations to a publication from its nth citation generation level publication. A relationship between the new direct citation weighting scheme and each of five existing schemes was investigated while the new residual citation scheme was compared with the cascading citation scheme. Two datasets from biomedical publications were used for this study, one each for the direct and residual citation weighting aspects of the study. The sample for the direct citation aspect contained 100 publications that received 7317 citations, 11,234 citation contexts, and 9,795 citation context pairs. A sample of 981 citation context pairs was given to two human experts for annotation into “similar”, “somewhat similar”, and “not similar” classes. Semantic similarity scores between the 11,234 citation contexts were obtained using BioSent2Vec word-embedding model for biomedical publications. The residual citation aspect sample included ten base articles and five generations of citations from which 5272 citation context pairs were obtained. Results of the Spearman’s rank correlation test showed that the correlation coefficients between the proposed direct citation weighting scheme and each of the weighting schemes “number of positive sentiments,” “number of multiple citation mentions,” “sum of multiple citation mentions,” “number of citations,” and “number of citation mentions” were .83, .89, .89, .93, and .99 respectively. The average residual citations received from the 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th citation generation level papers were 0.47, 0.43, 0.40, and 0.37 respectively. These average residual citations were significantly different from the averages of 0.5, 0.25, 0.125, and 0.0625 suggested by the cascading citation scheme. Even though the proposed direct citation weighting scheme and the residual citation scheme require more complex computations, it is recommended that they should be considered as credible alternatives to the “number of citation mentions” and cascading citation scheme respectively

    Study on open science: The general state of the play in Open Science principles and practices at European life sciences institutes

    Get PDF
    Nowadays, open science is a hot topic on all levels and also is one of the priorities of the European Research Area. Components that are commonly associated with open science are open access, open data, open methodology, open source, open peer review, open science policies and citizen science. Open science may a great potential to connect and influence the practices of researchers, funding institutions and the public. In this paper, we evaluate the level of openness based on public surveys at four European life sciences institute
    corecore