A bibliometric analysis of select information science print and electronic journals in the 1990s

This paper examines three e-journals and one paper journal begun in the 1990s within the information science genre. In addition, these journals are compared to what is perhaps the leading information science journal,one that has been published continuously for fifty years.  The journals we...

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Main Authors: Wallace Koehler, et al.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Borås 2000-01-01
Series:Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://informationr.net/ir/6-1/paper88.html
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spelling doaj-c71578f8942a4681b61a46caea41e95d2020-11-24T20:45:02ZengUniversity of BoråsInformation Research: An International Electronic Journal1368-16132000-01-016188A bibliometric analysis of select information science print and electronic journals in the 1990sWallace Koehleret al.This paper examines three e-journals and one paper journal begun in the 1990s within the information science genre. In addition, these journals are compared to what is perhaps the leading information science journal,one that has been published continuously for fifty years.&nbsp; The journals we examine are <i>CyberMetrics</i>, <i>Information Research</i>, the <i>Journal of Internet Cataloging</i>, <i>Libres, </i>and the <i>Journal of the American Society for Information Science. </i>We find that there are a number of important differences among the journals. These include frequency of publication, publication size, number of authors, and the funding status of articles. We also find differences among journals for distributions of authors by gender and corporate authors by region. Some of the regional differences can be explained by journal maturation -- the more mature the journal the greater the dispersion. We also find that women are more likely to publish in the newer journals than in <i>JASIS</i>.&nbsp; The fact that a journal is or is not an e-journal does not appear to affect its presence or &quot;behaviour&quot; as an information science journal.http://informationr.net/ir/6-1/paper88.htmle-journalsinformation scienceCyberMetricsInformation ResearchJournal of Internet CatalogingLibresand the Journal of the American Society for Information Scienceauthorsgenderregion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wallace Koehler
et al.
spellingShingle Wallace Koehler
et al.
A bibliometric analysis of select information science print and electronic journals in the 1990s
Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
e-journals
information science
CyberMetrics
Information Research
Journal of Internet Cataloging
Libres
and the Journal of the American Society for Information Science
authors
gender
region
author_facet Wallace Koehler
et al.
author_sort Wallace Koehler
title A bibliometric analysis of select information science print and electronic journals in the 1990s
title_short A bibliometric analysis of select information science print and electronic journals in the 1990s
title_full A bibliometric analysis of select information science print and electronic journals in the 1990s
title_fullStr A bibliometric analysis of select information science print and electronic journals in the 1990s
title_full_unstemmed A bibliometric analysis of select information science print and electronic journals in the 1990s
title_sort bibliometric analysis of select information science print and electronic journals in the 1990s
publisher University of Borås
series Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
issn 1368-1613
publishDate 2000-01-01
description This paper examines three e-journals and one paper journal begun in the 1990s within the information science genre. In addition, these journals are compared to what is perhaps the leading information science journal,one that has been published continuously for fifty years.&nbsp; The journals we examine are <i>CyberMetrics</i>, <i>Information Research</i>, the <i>Journal of Internet Cataloging</i>, <i>Libres, </i>and the <i>Journal of the American Society for Information Science. </i>We find that there are a number of important differences among the journals. These include frequency of publication, publication size, number of authors, and the funding status of articles. We also find differences among journals for distributions of authors by gender and corporate authors by region. Some of the regional differences can be explained by journal maturation -- the more mature the journal the greater the dispersion. We also find that women are more likely to publish in the newer journals than in <i>JASIS</i>.&nbsp; The fact that a journal is or is not an e-journal does not appear to affect its presence or &quot;behaviour&quot; as an information science journal.
topic e-journals
information science
CyberMetrics
Information Research
Journal of Internet Cataloging
Libres
and the Journal of the American Society for Information Science
authors
gender
region
url http://informationr.net/ir/6-1/paper88.html
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