Evaluating wider impacts of books via fine-grained mining on citation literatures

Citations are commonly used to measure academic impacts of scientific publications, including books. However, citation frequencies of books are single numerical evaluation metrics. It neglects details about books (e.g. contents), which may lead to the decline in comprehensiveness of evaluation resul...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientometrics 2020-12, Vol.125 (3), p.1923-1948
Hauptverfasser: Zhou, Qingqing, Zhang, Chengzhi
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Citations are commonly used to measure academic impacts of scientific publications, including books. However, citation frequencies of books are single numerical evaluation metrics. It neglects details about books (e.g. contents), which may lead to the decline in comprehensiveness of evaluation results. Hence, fine-grained mining on books’ citation information to integrate frequency metrics and content metrics can obtain more reliable evaluation results. Books’ citation literatures (i.e. literatures cited books) present citation frequencies of books, and reflect citation intentions, topics and domains simultaneously. Existing research focused on analysing citation frequencies, authors or citation contexts of citation literatures to conduct citation analysis. It may be costly for collecting citation contexts and neglected latent information of citation literatures, such as impact scopes or topics of books reflected by citation literatures. Therefore, in this paper, we conducted fine-grained analysis on books’ citation literatures to assess whether citation literatures could be systematically used for indicators of books’ wider impacts. Specifically, we firstly collected books and corresponding information about their citation literatures. Then, we extracted multi-dimensional metrics via multi-granularity mining on citation literatures, and got assessment results by integrating content-level and frequency-level metrics. Finally, we compared assessment results based on citation literatures and existing metrics for assessing books’ impacts to verify assessment results. Experimental results infer that citation literatures are a promising source for book impact assessment, especially books’ academic impacts.
ISSN:0138-9130
1588-2861
DOI:10.1007/s11192-020-03676-2