415 research outputs found
Constructing experimental indicators for Open Access documents
The ongoing paradigm change in the scholarly publication system ('science is
turning to e-science') makes it necessary to construct alternative evaluation
criteria/metrics which appropriately take into account the unique
characteristics of electronic publications and other research output in digital
formats. Today, major parts of scholarly Open Access (OA) publications and the
self-archiving area are not well covered in the traditional citation and
indexing databases. The growing share and importance of freely accessible
research output demands new approaches/metrics for measuring and for evaluating
of these new types of scientific publications. In this paper we propose a
simple quantitative method which establishes indicators by measuring the
access/download pattern of OA documents and other web entities of a single web
server. The experimental indicators (search engine, backlink and direct access
indicator) are constructed based on standard local web usage data. This new
type of web-based indicator is developed to model the specific demand for
better study/evaluation of the accessibility, visibility and interlinking of
open accessible documents. We conclude that e-science will need new stable
e-indicators.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Improving Retrieval Results with discipline-specific Query Expansion
Choosing the right terms to describe an information need is becoming more
difficult as the amount of available information increases.
Search-Term-Recommendation (STR) systems can help to overcome these problems.
This paper evaluates the benefits that may be gained from the use of STRs in
Query Expansion (QE). We create 17 STRs, 16 based on specific disciplines and
one giving general recommendations, and compare the retrieval performance of
these STRs. The main findings are: (1) QE with specific STRs leads to
significantly better results than QE with a general STR, (2) QE with specific
STRs selected by a heuristic mechanism of topic classification leads to better
results than the general STR, however (3) selecting the best matching specific
STR in an automatic way is a major challenge of this process.Comment: 6 pages; to be published in Proceedings of Theory and Practice of
Digital Libraries 2012 (TPDL 2012
Why is a new Journal of Informetrics needed?
In our study we analysed 3.889 records which were indexed in the Library and
Information Science Abstracts (LISA) database in the research field of
informetrics. We can show the core journals of the field via a Bradford (power
law) distribution and corroborate on the basis of the restricted LISA data set
that it was the appropriate time to found a new specialized journal dedicated
to informetrics. According to Bradford's Law of scattering (pure quantitative
calculation), Egghe's Journal of Informetrics (JOI) first issue to appear in
2007, comes most probable at the right time.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Cross-concordances: terminology mapping and its effectiveness for information retrieval
The German Federal Ministry for Education and Research funded a major
terminology mapping initiative, which found its conclusion in 2007. The task of
this terminology mapping initiative was to organize, create and manage
'cross-concordances' between controlled vocabularies (thesauri, classification
systems, subject heading lists) centred around the social sciences but quickly
extending to other subject areas. 64 crosswalks with more than 500,000
relations were established. In the final phase of the project, a major
evaluation effort to test and measure the effectiveness of the vocabulary
mappings in an information system environment was conducted. The paper reports
on the cross-concordance work and evaluation results.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures, 11 tables, IFLA conference 200
Comparing webometric with web-independent rankings: a case study with German universities
In this paper we examine if hyperlink-based (webometric) indicators can be
used to rank academic websites. Therefore we analyzed the interlinking
structure of German university websites and compared our simple hyperlink-based
ranking with official and web-independent rankings of universities. We found
that link impact could not easily be seen as a prestige factor for
universities.Comment: 3 pages, ACM Web Science 201
Discovering Links for Metadata Enrichment on Computer Science Papers
At the very beginning of compiling a bibliography, usually only basic
information, such as title, authors and publication date of an item are known.
In order to gather additional information about a specific item, one typically
has to search the library catalog or use a web search engine. This look-up
procedure implies a manual effort for every single item of a bibliography. In
this technical report we present a proof of concept which utilizes Linked Data
technology for the simple enrichment of sparse metadata sets. This is done by
discovering owl:sameAs links be- tween an initial set of computer science
papers and resources from external data sources like DBLP, ACM and the Semantic
Web Conference Corpus. In this report, we demonstrate how the link discovery
tool Silk is used to detect additional information and to enrich an initial set
of records in the computer science domain. The pros and cons of silk as link
discovery tool are summarized in the end.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figures, 7 listings, presented at SWIB1
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