| Literature DB >> 23024423 |
Teresa H Jones1, Claire Donovan, Steve Hanney.
Abstract
There is an increasing need both to understand the translation of biomedical research into improved healthcare and to assess the range of wider impacts from health research such as improved health policies, health practices and healthcare. Conducting such assessments is complex and new methods are being sought. Our new approach involves several steps. First, we developed a qualitative citation analysis technique to apply to biomedical research in order to assess the contribution that individual papers made to further research. Second, using this method, we then proposed to trace the citations to the original research through a series of generations of citing papers. Third, we aimed eventually to assess the wider impacts of the various generations. This article describes our comprehensive literature search to inform the new technique. We searched various databases, specific bibliometrics journals and the bibliographies of key papers. After excluding irrelevant papers we reviewed those remaining for either general or specific details that could inform development of our new technique. Various characteristics of citations were identified that had been found to predict their importance to the citing paper including the citation's location; number of citation occasions and whether the author(s) of the cited paper were named within the citing paper. We combined these objective characteristics with subjective approaches also identified from the literature search to develop a citation categorisation technique that would allow us to achieve the first of the steps above, i.e., being able routinely to assess the contribution that individual papers make to further research.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23024423 PMCID: PMC3460170 DOI: 10.1007/s11192-012-0642-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scientometrics ISSN: 0138-9130 Impact factor: 3.238
Databases searched listed in the order of searching, details of the searches conducted and the dates covered by each search
| Databases searched | Dates covered | Type of search | Extent of search | New papers identified after exact duplicates removed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WOS including SCI-expanded, SSCI, A&HCI, CPCI-S | 1970–2009 | Advanced | Title, abstract, author keywords, keywords plus | 1,372 |
| Scopus | 1823–2009 | Advanced | Title, abstract, keywords | 640 |
| Library, information science & technology abstracts (LISTA) | 1965–2010 | Boolean/phrase | Title, abstract, keywords | 230 |
| SpringerLink | All | Basic | Summary | 710 |
| Sigle | 1980–2005 | Search | Title, author, subject abstract, series, sponsor, identifier | 31 |
| Medline | 1950–2009 | Advanced | Title, abstract, subject heading | 662 |
| InfoSci journals | All | Basic | Abstract | 13 |
| Information science reference | All | Basic | Abstract | 19 |
Journals hand-searched and the dates covered in the search
| Journals searched | Dates covered | Number of papers identified |
|---|---|---|
| Journal of documentation | 1961–2009 | 679 |
| Scientometrics | 1978–2009 | 2,450 |
| Journal of the American society of information science & technology | 1972–2009 | 2,501 |
| Social studies of science | 1975–2009 | 519 |
Findings from our initial review of the papers identified in the searches described and reasons for exclusion from further study
| Excluded papers: Total | 8,765 |
| Not a study of citations. | 5,307 |
| Only a quantitative assessment, e.g., a count of citations, mathematical manipulations such as Lotka’s law, Bradford, Hirsch; an assessment of a specific body of literature, e.g., as found in a journal, library, institution, geographical area; considering collaboration. | 2,895 |
| Only an assessment of the distribution of citations, e.g., co-citation, mapping, diffusion, data envelopment analysis, reference analysis. | 496 |
| Specifically describing: Ortega hypothesis; patents; comparisons of quantitative bibliometric techniques and peer-review; or paper not in English. | 67 |
| Papers for further study: Total | 285 |
| General background: theoretical papers concerning the meaning of citations without any relevant methodological detail but potentially interesting for our study. | 179 |
| Methodological: specific to the development of our method either in a general way or because they discuss particular issues such as self-citation or location of a citation. | 106 |