Citation patterns in translation studies: a format-dependent bibliometric analysis

Citation distributions vary across the board among academic disciplines, which is the reason why field-oriented normalisation is necessary to compensate for this. In this vein, the aim of this study is three-fold. Firstly, to find out which document type is cited the most in translation studies (TS)...

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Main Authors: Sara Rovira-Esteva, Javier Franco Aixelá, Christian Olalla-Sole
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Western Sydney University 2019-02-01
Series:Translation and Interpreting : the International Journal of Translation and Interpreting Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.trans-int.org/index.php/transint/article/view/843
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spelling doaj-31e5de804ae74abc8f1b9975ee71a1e82020-11-25T01:20:06ZengWestern Sydney UniversityTranslation and Interpreting : the International Journal of Translation and Interpreting Research1836-93242019-02-0111114717110.12807/ti.111201.2019.a09Citation patterns in translation studies: a format-dependent bibliometric analysisSara Rovira-EstevaJavier Franco AixeláChristian Olalla-SoleCitation distributions vary across the board among academic disciplines, which is the reason why field-oriented normalisation is necessary to compensate for this. In this vein, the aim of this study is three-fold. Firstly, to find out which document type is cited the most in translation studies (TS). Secondly, to determine the time distribution for citations and aging patterns in TS scientific literature. Thirdly, to define a discipline-weighted citation window or cited half-life, in order to establish the optimal citation window to be used in TS. Data enabling the present research will be retrieved from BITRA, which includes over 70,000 items covering the diversity of document types and languages used in TS research for all times and the citing information of over 10% of its entries. This database will thus allow us to carry out a study on citation and aging patterns in TS academic literature covering the 1960-2015 period. Both, global results, as well as a more detailed analysis focusing on different document types, will be provided. This bibliometric study aims to offer a discipline-focused approach in order to develop specific and realistic impact criteria for our discipline, while taking into account its actual research and communication practices. http://www.trans-int.org/index.php/transint/article/view/843bibliometricscitation patternsdocument typeimpactnormalisationtranslation studies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sara Rovira-Esteva
Javier Franco Aixelá
Christian Olalla-Sole
spellingShingle Sara Rovira-Esteva
Javier Franco Aixelá
Christian Olalla-Sole
Citation patterns in translation studies: a format-dependent bibliometric analysis
Translation and Interpreting : the International Journal of Translation and Interpreting Research
bibliometrics
citation patterns
document type
impact
normalisation
translation studies
author_facet Sara Rovira-Esteva
Javier Franco Aixelá
Christian Olalla-Sole
author_sort Sara Rovira-Esteva
title Citation patterns in translation studies: a format-dependent bibliometric analysis
title_short Citation patterns in translation studies: a format-dependent bibliometric analysis
title_full Citation patterns in translation studies: a format-dependent bibliometric analysis
title_fullStr Citation patterns in translation studies: a format-dependent bibliometric analysis
title_full_unstemmed Citation patterns in translation studies: a format-dependent bibliometric analysis
title_sort citation patterns in translation studies: a format-dependent bibliometric analysis
publisher Western Sydney University
series Translation and Interpreting : the International Journal of Translation and Interpreting Research
issn 1836-9324
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Citation distributions vary across the board among academic disciplines, which is the reason why field-oriented normalisation is necessary to compensate for this. In this vein, the aim of this study is three-fold. Firstly, to find out which document type is cited the most in translation studies (TS). Secondly, to determine the time distribution for citations and aging patterns in TS scientific literature. Thirdly, to define a discipline-weighted citation window or cited half-life, in order to establish the optimal citation window to be used in TS. Data enabling the present research will be retrieved from BITRA, which includes over 70,000 items covering the diversity of document types and languages used in TS research for all times and the citing information of over 10% of its entries. This database will thus allow us to carry out a study on citation and aging patterns in TS academic literature covering the 1960-2015 period. Both, global results, as well as a more detailed analysis focusing on different document types, will be provided. This bibliometric study aims to offer a discipline-focused approach in order to develop specific and realistic impact criteria for our discipline, while taking into account its actual research and communication practices.
topic bibliometrics
citation patterns
document type
impact
normalisation
translation studies
url http://www.trans-int.org/index.php/transint/article/view/843
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AT javierfrancoaixela citationpatternsintranslationstudiesaformatdependentbibliometricanalysis
AT christianolallasole citationpatternsintranslationstudiesaformatdependentbibliometricanalysis
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