Can we rank scholarly book publishers? A bibliometric experiment with the field of history.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Can we rank scholarly book publishers? A bibliometric experiment with the field of history. / Zuccala, Alesia; Guns, R. ; Cornacchia, R.; Bod, R.

I: American Society for Information Science and Technology. Journal, Bind 66, Nr. 7, 2015, s. 1333-1347.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Zuccala, A, Guns, R, Cornacchia, R & Bod, R 2015, 'Can we rank scholarly book publishers? A bibliometric experiment with the field of history.', American Society for Information Science and Technology. Journal, bind 66, nr. 7, s. 1333-1347.

APA

Zuccala, A., Guns, R., Cornacchia, R., & Bod, R. (2015). Can we rank scholarly book publishers? A bibliometric experiment with the field of history. American Society for Information Science and Technology. Journal, 66(7), 1333-1347.

Vancouver

Zuccala A, Guns R, Cornacchia R, Bod R. Can we rank scholarly book publishers? A bibliometric experiment with the field of history. American Society for Information Science and Technology. Journal. 2015;66(7):1333-1347.

Author

Zuccala, Alesia ; Guns, R. ; Cornacchia, R. ; Bod, R. / Can we rank scholarly book publishers? A bibliometric experiment with the field of history. I: American Society for Information Science and Technology. Journal. 2015 ; Bind 66, Nr. 7. s. 1333-1347.

Bibtex

@article{62c26e4ef5d14084b7a65e95228c4ff2,
title = "Can we rank scholarly book publishers? A bibliometric experiment with the field of history.",
abstract = "This is a publisher ranking study based on a citation data grant from Elsevier, specifically, book titles cited in Scopus history journals (2007–2011) and matching metadata from WorldCat{\textregistered} (i.e., OCLC numbers, ISBN codes, publisher records, and library holding counts). Using both resources, we have created a unique relational database designed to compare citation counts to books with international library holdings or libcitations for scholarly book publishers. First, we construct a ranking of the top 500 publishers and explore descriptive statistics at the level of publisher type (university, commercial, other) and country of origin. We then identify the top 50 university presses and commercial houses based on total citations and mean citations per book (CPB). In a third analysis, we present a map of directed citation links between journals and book publishers. American and British presses/publishing houses tend to dominate the work of library collection managers and citing scholars; however, a number of specialist publishers from Europe are included. Distinct clusters from the directed citation map indicate a certain degree of regionalism and subject specialization, where some journals produced in languages other than English tend to cite books published by the same parent press. Bibliometric rankings convey only a small part of how the actual structure of the publishing field has evolved; hence, challenges lie ahead for developers of new citation indices for books and bibliometricians interested in measuring book and publisher impacts.",
author = "Alesia Zuccala and R. Guns and R. Cornacchia and R. Bod",
year = "2015",
language = "English",
volume = "66",
pages = "1333--1347",
journal = "American Society for Information Science and Technology. Journal",
issn = "2330-1635",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Can we rank scholarly book publishers? A bibliometric experiment with the field of history.

AU - Zuccala, Alesia

AU - Guns, R.

AU - Cornacchia, R.

AU - Bod, R.

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - This is a publisher ranking study based on a citation data grant from Elsevier, specifically, book titles cited in Scopus history journals (2007–2011) and matching metadata from WorldCat® (i.e., OCLC numbers, ISBN codes, publisher records, and library holding counts). Using both resources, we have created a unique relational database designed to compare citation counts to books with international library holdings or libcitations for scholarly book publishers. First, we construct a ranking of the top 500 publishers and explore descriptive statistics at the level of publisher type (university, commercial, other) and country of origin. We then identify the top 50 university presses and commercial houses based on total citations and mean citations per book (CPB). In a third analysis, we present a map of directed citation links between journals and book publishers. American and British presses/publishing houses tend to dominate the work of library collection managers and citing scholars; however, a number of specialist publishers from Europe are included. Distinct clusters from the directed citation map indicate a certain degree of regionalism and subject specialization, where some journals produced in languages other than English tend to cite books published by the same parent press. Bibliometric rankings convey only a small part of how the actual structure of the publishing field has evolved; hence, challenges lie ahead for developers of new citation indices for books and bibliometricians interested in measuring book and publisher impacts.

AB - This is a publisher ranking study based on a citation data grant from Elsevier, specifically, book titles cited in Scopus history journals (2007–2011) and matching metadata from WorldCat® (i.e., OCLC numbers, ISBN codes, publisher records, and library holding counts). Using both resources, we have created a unique relational database designed to compare citation counts to books with international library holdings or libcitations for scholarly book publishers. First, we construct a ranking of the top 500 publishers and explore descriptive statistics at the level of publisher type (university, commercial, other) and country of origin. We then identify the top 50 university presses and commercial houses based on total citations and mean citations per book (CPB). In a third analysis, we present a map of directed citation links between journals and book publishers. American and British presses/publishing houses tend to dominate the work of library collection managers and citing scholars; however, a number of specialist publishers from Europe are included. Distinct clusters from the directed citation map indicate a certain degree of regionalism and subject specialization, where some journals produced in languages other than English tend to cite books published by the same parent press. Bibliometric rankings convey only a small part of how the actual structure of the publishing field has evolved; hence, challenges lie ahead for developers of new citation indices for books and bibliometricians interested in measuring book and publisher impacts.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 66

SP - 1333

EP - 1347

JO - American Society for Information Science and Technology. Journal

JF - American Society for Information Science and Technology. Journal

SN - 2330-1635

IS - 7

ER -

ID: 118465575