| Literature DB >> 26110028 |
Abstract
Emerging metrics based on article-level does not exclude traditional metrics based on citations to the journal, but complements them. Both can be employed in conjunction to offer a richer picture of an article use from immediate to long terms. Article-level metrics (ALM) is the result of the aggregation of different data sources and the collection of content from multiple social network services. Sources used for the aggregation can be broken down into five categories: usage, captures, mentions, social media and citations. Data sources depend on the tool, but they include classic metrics indicators based on citations, academic social networks (Mendeley, CiteULike, Delicious) and social media (Facebook, Twitter, blogs, or Youtube, among others). Altmetrics is not synonymous with alternative metrics. Altmetrics are normally early available and allow to assess the social impact of scholarly outputs, almost at the real time. This paper overviews briefly the meaning of altmetrics and describes some of the existing tools used to apply this new metrics: Public Library of Science--Article-Level Metrics, Altmetric, Impactstory and Plum.Entities:
Keywords: altmetrics; article-level metrics; citation; social media
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26110028 PMCID: PMC4470104 DOI: 10.11613/BM.2015.016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Med (Zagreb) ISSN: 1330-0962 Impact factor: 2.313
Figure 1How is the measure of impact in terms of traditional metrics and altmetrics (). Measurements at personal and article-levels increase granularity (disaggregation from journals as entities). Altmetrics provide impact at real time (immediate), while traditional methods need longer times to facilitate impact data.
Sources used for the aggregation of information data by the four Article-Level Metrics (ALM) tools described in this article (ALM-PLoS, Altmetrics, ImpactStory, Plum Analytics). Sources can be broken down in 5 categories usage, captures, mentions, social media, and citations ().
| Papers from PLOS | PLOS and PubMed Central | PubMed Central, Scopus, ISI Web of Science, and CrossRef | CiteULike, Mendeley, Reddit, Google+, Stumble Upon Connotea | Twitter, Facebook, Google Blogs, Researchblogging.org, Nature Blogs | |
| Scholarly articles | PubMed, Arxiv or pages containing a DOI | Scopus, Web of Science CrossRef | CiteULike, Mendeley | Twitter, Facebook, Blogs, YouTube, Google +, Pinterest, Wikipedia, Weibo users, Redditors | |
| All the research products (Journal articles, blog posts, datasets, and software…) | PLOS, PubMed, ArXiv, slideshare, vimeo, youtube, Dryad package views, figshare views, webpages (from Impactstory), ScienceSeeker, ORCID) | Scopus, Web of Knowledge, Highwire, Google Scholar Citations, Pubmed | CiteULike, Mendeley, CrossRef, Vimeo, Figshare, Github, Slideshare, Youtube, Delicious | Twitter, Facebook, Blogs, Figshare, Wikipedia, Vimeo, Youtube, Slideshare, Delicious, GitHub | |
| Journal articles, books, videos, presentations, conference proceedings, datasets, source code | EBSCO, PLOS, bit.ly, Facebook, GitHub, Dryad, Figshare, Slideshare, Institutional Repositories, WorldCat. | CrossRef, PubMed Central, Scopus, USPTO | CiteULike, Delicious, Slideshare, YouTube, GitHub, Goodreads, Mendeley, Vimeo | Facebook, Reddit, Slideshare, Vimeo, YouTube, GitHub, StackExchange, Wikipedia, SourceForge, Research Blogging, Science Seeker, Amazon, Google Plus, Twitter via DataSift | |
Figure 2Screenshot showing two examples of two papers that received a high attention online according Altmetric data.
Figure 3Screenshot of an item deposit in the institutional repository of Queensland University of Technology, showing a summary of the article statistics, including altmetrics (left bottom corner of the screenshot).
Figure 4Fictional example of an Impactstory profile. Users create their CVs by uploading their works (articles, slides presentations, code, datasets, posters and web pages) and Impactstory provides various statistics including information about how to reference any item, its DOI, PubMed ID, and allows CVs to be downloaded in comma separated value (.csv) format.
Figure 5Effect of social networks (Twitter) on the impact and downloads of an open access paper deposited in a repository ().