Digital Presence of Norwegian Scholars on Academic Network Sites--Where and Who Are They?

The use of academic profiling sites is becoming more common, and emerging technologies boost researchers' visibility and exchange of ideas. In our study we compared profiles at five different profiling sites. These five sites are ResearchGate, Academia.edu, Google Scholar Citations, ResearcherI...

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Main Authors: Susanne Mikki, Marta Zygmuntowska, Øyvind Liland Gjesdal, Hemed Ali Al Ruwehy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0142709
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spelling doaj-179fe1d5344448b4a8c2ee20f72567002021-03-03T19:57:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011011e014270910.1371/journal.pone.0142709Digital Presence of Norwegian Scholars on Academic Network Sites--Where and Who Are They?Susanne MikkiMarta ZygmuntowskaØyvind Liland GjesdalHemed Ali Al RuwehyThe use of academic profiling sites is becoming more common, and emerging technologies boost researchers' visibility and exchange of ideas. In our study we compared profiles at five different profiling sites. These five sites are ResearchGate, Academia.edu, Google Scholar Citations, ResearcherID and ORCID. The data set is enriched by demographic information including age, gender, position and affiliation, which are provided by the national CRIS-system in Norway. We find that approximately 37% of researchers at the University of Bergen have at least one profile, the prevalence being highest (> 40%) for members at the Faculty of Psychology and the Faculty of Social Sciences. Across all disciplines, ResearchGate is the most widely used platform. However, within Faculty of Humanities, Academia.edu is the preferred one. Researchers are reluctant to maintain multiple profiles, and there is little overlap between different services. Age turns out to be a poor indicator for presence in the investigated profiling sites, women are underrepresented and professors together with PhD students are the most likely profile holders. We next investigated the correlation between bibliometric measures, such as publications and citations, and user activities, such as downloads and followers. We find different bibliometric indicators to correlate strongly within individual platforms and across platforms. There is however less agreement between the traditional bibliometric and social activity indicators.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0142709
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Susanne Mikki
Marta Zygmuntowska
Øyvind Liland Gjesdal
Hemed Ali Al Ruwehy
spellingShingle Susanne Mikki
Marta Zygmuntowska
Øyvind Liland Gjesdal
Hemed Ali Al Ruwehy
Digital Presence of Norwegian Scholars on Academic Network Sites--Where and Who Are They?
PLoS ONE
author_facet Susanne Mikki
Marta Zygmuntowska
Øyvind Liland Gjesdal
Hemed Ali Al Ruwehy
author_sort Susanne Mikki
title Digital Presence of Norwegian Scholars on Academic Network Sites--Where and Who Are They?
title_short Digital Presence of Norwegian Scholars on Academic Network Sites--Where and Who Are They?
title_full Digital Presence of Norwegian Scholars on Academic Network Sites--Where and Who Are They?
title_fullStr Digital Presence of Norwegian Scholars on Academic Network Sites--Where and Who Are They?
title_full_unstemmed Digital Presence of Norwegian Scholars on Academic Network Sites--Where and Who Are They?
title_sort digital presence of norwegian scholars on academic network sites--where and who are they?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description The use of academic profiling sites is becoming more common, and emerging technologies boost researchers' visibility and exchange of ideas. In our study we compared profiles at five different profiling sites. These five sites are ResearchGate, Academia.edu, Google Scholar Citations, ResearcherID and ORCID. The data set is enriched by demographic information including age, gender, position and affiliation, which are provided by the national CRIS-system in Norway. We find that approximately 37% of researchers at the University of Bergen have at least one profile, the prevalence being highest (> 40%) for members at the Faculty of Psychology and the Faculty of Social Sciences. Across all disciplines, ResearchGate is the most widely used platform. However, within Faculty of Humanities, Academia.edu is the preferred one. Researchers are reluctant to maintain multiple profiles, and there is little overlap between different services. Age turns out to be a poor indicator for presence in the investigated profiling sites, women are underrepresented and professors together with PhD students are the most likely profile holders. We next investigated the correlation between bibliometric measures, such as publications and citations, and user activities, such as downloads and followers. We find different bibliometric indicators to correlate strongly within individual platforms and across platforms. There is however less agreement between the traditional bibliometric and social activity indicators.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0142709
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