| Literature DB >> 34914027 |
Anton Ninkov1, Jason R Frank2,3, Lauren A Maggio4.
Abstract
Bibliometrics is the study of academic publishing that uses statistics to describe publishing trends and to highlight relationships between published works. Likened to epidemiology, researchers seek to answer questions about a field based on data about publications (e.g., authors, topics, funding) in the same way that an epidemiologist queries patient data to understand the health of a population. In this Eye Opener, the authors introduce bibliometrics and define its key terminology and concepts, including relational and evaluative bibliometrics. Readers are introduced to common bibliometric methods and their related strengths and weaknesses. The authors provide examples of bibliometrics applied in health professions education and propose potential future research directions. Health professions educators are consumers of bibliometric reports and can adopt its methodologies for future studies.Entities:
Keywords: Bibliometrics; Information science; Scholarly communication
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34914027 PMCID: PMC9240160 DOI: 10.1007/s40037-021-00695-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perspect Med Educ ISSN: 2212-2761
Key definitions of bibliometric concepts
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Bibliometrics | The analysis of published information (e.g., books, journal articles, datasets, blogs) and its related metadata (e.g., abstracts, keywords, citations) using statistics to describe or show relationships between published work [ |
| Evaluative bibliometrics | An approach to bibliometrics that aids in the evaluation of units of analysis [ |
| Relational bibliometrics | An approach to bibliometrics that provides insights into the relationships between units of analysis [ |
| Metadata | General definition: Data about data. More specific definition: The “internal and external documentation and other data necessary for the identification, representation, interoperability, technical management, performance and use of data contained in an information system” [ |
| Impact factor | Used to describe both journals or authors, an impact factor is a representation of the number of citations as a comparison to the number of publications [ |
| The |