Which Are the “Best” Cities for Psychology Research Worldwide?

We present scientometric results about worldwide centers of excellence in psychology. Based on Web of Science data, scientific excellence can be identified for cities from where highly-cited papers originate. Data refer to all psychology articles published in 2007 which are documented in the Social...

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Main Authors: Lutz Bornmann, Loet Leydesdorff, Günter Krampen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen 2012-11-01
Series:Europe's Journal of Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ejop.psychopen.eu/article/view/482
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spelling doaj-1c323b36eba041e4bd9b363ba515e1ad2020-11-25T03:33:01ZengPsychOpenEurope's Journal of Psychology1841-04132012-11-018453554610.5964/ejop.v8i4.482ejop.v8i4.482Which Are the “Best” Cities for Psychology Research Worldwide?Lutz Bornmann0Loet Leydesdorff1Günter Krampen2Division for Science and Innovation Studies, Max Planck Society, Munich, GermanyAmsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR), University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The NetherlandsLeibniz Institute for Psychology Information, University of Trier, GermanyWe present scientometric results about worldwide centers of excellence in psychology. Based on Web of Science data, scientific excellence can be identified for cities from where highly-cited papers originate. Data refer to all psychology articles published in 2007 which are documented in the Social Science Citation Index and to their citation frequencies from 2007 to May 2011. 218 cities are visualized with an article output of at least 50 in 2007. Statistical z tests are used for the evaluation of the degree to which an observed number of top-cited papers (top-10%) for a city differs from the number expected on the basis of randomness in the selection of papers. The map points at excellence centers in cities at the East and West Coast of the USA as well as in Great Britain, Germany, the Netherlands, Ireland, Belgium, Sweden, Finland, Australia, and Taiwan. These results indicate that highly-cited psychological research articles come from the Anglo-American countries and some of the non-English European countries in which the number of English-language publications has increased during the last decades. Implications of the results for the publication strategies of psychologists in non-English speaking countries are discussed as well as the neccessity to care for qualitative criteria in evaluations in addition to quantitative, scientometric criteria.http://ejop.psychopen.eu/article/view/482scientometricscitation analysisbibliometricspsychologyresearch excellence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lutz Bornmann
Loet Leydesdorff
Günter Krampen
spellingShingle Lutz Bornmann
Loet Leydesdorff
Günter Krampen
Which Are the “Best” Cities for Psychology Research Worldwide?
Europe's Journal of Psychology
scientometrics
citation analysis
bibliometrics
psychology
research excellence
author_facet Lutz Bornmann
Loet Leydesdorff
Günter Krampen
author_sort Lutz Bornmann
title Which Are the “Best” Cities for Psychology Research Worldwide?
title_short Which Are the “Best” Cities for Psychology Research Worldwide?
title_full Which Are the “Best” Cities for Psychology Research Worldwide?
title_fullStr Which Are the “Best” Cities for Psychology Research Worldwide?
title_full_unstemmed Which Are the “Best” Cities for Psychology Research Worldwide?
title_sort which are the “best” cities for psychology research worldwide?
publisher PsychOpen
series Europe's Journal of Psychology
issn 1841-0413
publishDate 2012-11-01
description We present scientometric results about worldwide centers of excellence in psychology. Based on Web of Science data, scientific excellence can be identified for cities from where highly-cited papers originate. Data refer to all psychology articles published in 2007 which are documented in the Social Science Citation Index and to their citation frequencies from 2007 to May 2011. 218 cities are visualized with an article output of at least 50 in 2007. Statistical z tests are used for the evaluation of the degree to which an observed number of top-cited papers (top-10%) for a city differs from the number expected on the basis of randomness in the selection of papers. The map points at excellence centers in cities at the East and West Coast of the USA as well as in Great Britain, Germany, the Netherlands, Ireland, Belgium, Sweden, Finland, Australia, and Taiwan. These results indicate that highly-cited psychological research articles come from the Anglo-American countries and some of the non-English European countries in which the number of English-language publications has increased during the last decades. Implications of the results for the publication strategies of psychologists in non-English speaking countries are discussed as well as the neccessity to care for qualitative criteria in evaluations in addition to quantitative, scientometric criteria.
topic scientometrics
citation analysis
bibliometrics
psychology
research excellence
url http://ejop.psychopen.eu/article/view/482
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