Where and how knowledge on digital library evaluation spreads: a case study on conference literature

Scholarly communication has not remained unaffected by the advance of the social networking culture. The traditional bibliometric paradigm is strongly questioned as a tool that accurately portrays the impact of research outcomes. New metrics, such as download or view rates and shares, have been prop...

Πλήρης περιγραφή

Λεπτομέρειες βιβλιογραφικής εγγραφής
Κύριοι συγγραφείς: Papachristopoulos, Leonidas, Mitrelis, Angelos, Tsakonas, Giannis, Papatheodorou, Christos
Άλλοι συγγραφείς: Παπαχριστόπουλος, Λεωνίδας
Μορφή: Conference (paper)
Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: 2014
Θέματα:
Διαθέσιμο Online:http://hdl.handle.net/10889/7587
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record_format dspace
spelling nemertes-10889-75872022-09-06T05:12:41Z Where and how knowledge on digital library evaluation spreads: a case study on conference literature Papachristopoulos, Leonidas Mitrelis, Angelos Tsakonas, Giannis Papatheodorou, Christos Παπαχριστόπουλος, Λεωνίδας Μητρέλης, Άγγελος Τσάκωνας, Γιάννης Παπαθεοδώρου, Χρήστος Altmetrics conference literature digital library evaluation Mendeley Εναλλακτικές μετρικές εργασίες συνεδρίων αξιολόγηση ψηφιακών βιβλιοθηκών Scholarly communication has not remained unaffected by the advance of the social networking culture. The traditional bibliometric paradigm is strongly questioned as a tool that accurately portrays the impact of research outcomes. New metrics, such as download or view rates and shares, have been proposed as alternative ways for measuring the impact of digital content published in the form of articles, datasets, etc. Mendeley's Readership Statistics are one of these metrics, based on the assumption that there is a linkage between a paper in a collection and the interests of collection owner. The current study explores the “altmetric” aspects of the literature of the Digital Libraries Evaluation domain, as it is expressed in two major conferences of the field, namely JCDL and ECDL. Our corpus consists of 224 papers, for which we extract readership data from Mendeley and examine in how many collections these papers belong to. Our goal is to investigate whether readership statistics can help us to understand where and to whom DL evaluation research has impact. Therefore the data are analyzed statistically to produce indicators of geographical, and topical distribution of Mendeley Readers as well as to explore and classify their their profession. Finally it derived that there is a loose correlation between the number of Google Scholar citations and the number of Mendeley readers. -- 2014-05-21T19:35:14Z 2014-05-21T19:35:14Z 16 - 20 June 2014 2014-05-21 Conference (paper) http://hdl.handle.net/10889/7587 en application/pdf
institution UPatras
collection Nemertes
language English
topic Altmetrics
conference literature
digital library evaluation
Mendeley
Εναλλακτικές μετρικές
εργασίες συνεδρίων
αξιολόγηση ψηφιακών βιβλιοθηκών
spellingShingle Altmetrics
conference literature
digital library evaluation
Mendeley
Εναλλακτικές μετρικές
εργασίες συνεδρίων
αξιολόγηση ψηφιακών βιβλιοθηκών
Papachristopoulos, Leonidas
Mitrelis, Angelos
Tsakonas, Giannis
Papatheodorou, Christos
Where and how knowledge on digital library evaluation spreads: a case study on conference literature
description Scholarly communication has not remained unaffected by the advance of the social networking culture. The traditional bibliometric paradigm is strongly questioned as a tool that accurately portrays the impact of research outcomes. New metrics, such as download or view rates and shares, have been proposed as alternative ways for measuring the impact of digital content published in the form of articles, datasets, etc. Mendeley's Readership Statistics are one of these metrics, based on the assumption that there is a linkage between a paper in a collection and the interests of collection owner. The current study explores the “altmetric” aspects of the literature of the Digital Libraries Evaluation domain, as it is expressed in two major conferences of the field, namely JCDL and ECDL. Our corpus consists of 224 papers, for which we extract readership data from Mendeley and examine in how many collections these papers belong to. Our goal is to investigate whether readership statistics can help us to understand where and to whom DL evaluation research has impact. Therefore the data are analyzed statistically to produce indicators of geographical, and topical distribution of Mendeley Readers as well as to explore and classify their their profession. Finally it derived that there is a loose correlation between the number of Google Scholar citations and the number of Mendeley readers.
author2 Παπαχριστόπουλος, Λεωνίδας
author_facet Παπαχριστόπουλος, Λεωνίδας
Papachristopoulos, Leonidas
Mitrelis, Angelos
Tsakonas, Giannis
Papatheodorou, Christos
format Conference (paper)
author Papachristopoulos, Leonidas
Mitrelis, Angelos
Tsakonas, Giannis
Papatheodorou, Christos
author_sort Papachristopoulos, Leonidas
title Where and how knowledge on digital library evaluation spreads: a case study on conference literature
title_short Where and how knowledge on digital library evaluation spreads: a case study on conference literature
title_full Where and how knowledge on digital library evaluation spreads: a case study on conference literature
title_fullStr Where and how knowledge on digital library evaluation spreads: a case study on conference literature
title_full_unstemmed Where and how knowledge on digital library evaluation spreads: a case study on conference literature
title_sort where and how knowledge on digital library evaluation spreads: a case study on conference literature
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10889/7587
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