Comparative Study of Trace Metrics between Bibliometrics and Patentometrics

Purpose: To comprehensively evaluate the overall performance of a group or an individual in both bibliometrics and patentometrics. Design/methodology/approach: Trace metrics were applied to the top 30 universities in the 2014 Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU) — computer sciences, the to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fred Y. Ye, Mu-Hsuan Huang, Dar-Zen Chen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Chinese Academy of Sciences 2016-06-01
Series:Journal of Data and Information Science
Subjects:
I3
Online Access:http://www.jdis.org/CN/html/Article8615.htm
id doaj-35c3a2c92bef41deb99a2a16f1f5dd17
record_format Article
spelling doaj-35c3a2c92bef41deb99a2a16f1f5dd172020-11-24T22:40:07ZengChinese Academy of SciencesJournal of Data and Information Science2096-157X2096-157X2016-06-0112133110.20309/jdis.201611Comparative Study of Trace Metrics between Bibliometrics and PatentometricsFred Y. Ye0Mu-Hsuan Huang1Dar-Zen Chen2School of Information Management, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210023, ChinaDepartment of Library and Information Science, Taiwan University, Taipei 10617, ChinaDepartment of Mechanical Engineering and Institute of Industrial Engineering, Taiwan University, Taipei 10617, ChinaPurpose: To comprehensively evaluate the overall performance of a group or an individual in both bibliometrics and patentometrics. Design/methodology/approach: Trace metrics were applied to the top 30 universities in the 2014 Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU) — computer sciences, the top 30 ESI highly cited papers in the computer sciences field in 2014, as well as the top 30 assignees and the top 30 most cited patents in the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) computer hardware and software category. Findings: We found that, by applying trace metrics, the research or marketing impact efficiency, at both group and individual levels, was clearly observed. Furthermore, trace metrics were more sensitive to the different publication-citation distributions than the average citation and h-index were. Research limitations: Trace metrics considered publications with zero citations as negative contributions. One should clarify how he/she evaluates a zero-citation paper or patent before applying trace metrics. Practical implications: Decision makers could regularly examinine the performance of their university/company by applying trace metrics and adjust their policies accordingly. Originality/value: Trace metrics could be applied both in bibliometrics and patentometrics and provide a comprehensive view. Moreover, the high sensitivity and unique impact efficiency view provided by trace metrics can facilitate decision makers in examining and adjusting their policies. http://www.jdis.org/CN/html/Article8615.htmPerformance matrixTrace metricsh-indexh-coreI3BibliometricsPatentometrics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fred Y. Ye
Mu-Hsuan Huang
Dar-Zen Chen
spellingShingle Fred Y. Ye
Mu-Hsuan Huang
Dar-Zen Chen
Comparative Study of Trace Metrics between Bibliometrics and Patentometrics
Journal of Data and Information Science
Performance matrix
Trace metrics
h-index
h-core
I3
Bibliometrics
Patentometrics
author_facet Fred Y. Ye
Mu-Hsuan Huang
Dar-Zen Chen
author_sort Fred Y. Ye
title Comparative Study of Trace Metrics between Bibliometrics and Patentometrics
title_short Comparative Study of Trace Metrics between Bibliometrics and Patentometrics
title_full Comparative Study of Trace Metrics between Bibliometrics and Patentometrics
title_fullStr Comparative Study of Trace Metrics between Bibliometrics and Patentometrics
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Study of Trace Metrics between Bibliometrics and Patentometrics
title_sort comparative study of trace metrics between bibliometrics and patentometrics
publisher Chinese Academy of Sciences
series Journal of Data and Information Science
issn 2096-157X
2096-157X
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Purpose: To comprehensively evaluate the overall performance of a group or an individual in both bibliometrics and patentometrics. Design/methodology/approach: Trace metrics were applied to the top 30 universities in the 2014 Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU) — computer sciences, the top 30 ESI highly cited papers in the computer sciences field in 2014, as well as the top 30 assignees and the top 30 most cited patents in the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) computer hardware and software category. Findings: We found that, by applying trace metrics, the research or marketing impact efficiency, at both group and individual levels, was clearly observed. Furthermore, trace metrics were more sensitive to the different publication-citation distributions than the average citation and h-index were. Research limitations: Trace metrics considered publications with zero citations as negative contributions. One should clarify how he/she evaluates a zero-citation paper or patent before applying trace metrics. Practical implications: Decision makers could regularly examinine the performance of their university/company by applying trace metrics and adjust their policies accordingly. Originality/value: Trace metrics could be applied both in bibliometrics and patentometrics and provide a comprehensive view. Moreover, the high sensitivity and unique impact efficiency view provided by trace metrics can facilitate decision makers in examining and adjusting their policies.
topic Performance matrix
Trace metrics
h-index
h-core
I3
Bibliometrics
Patentometrics
url http://www.jdis.org/CN/html/Article8615.htm
work_keys_str_mv AT fredyye comparativestudyoftracemetricsbetweenbibliometricsandpatentometrics
AT muhsuanhuang comparativestudyoftracemetricsbetweenbibliometricsandpatentometrics
AT darzenchen comparativestudyoftracemetricsbetweenbibliometricsandpatentometrics
_version_ 1725705841403756544