If one wants to see how excluding foreign references can have adverse effects 
on citation analysis, here the list of references for a randomly picked up 
Japanese paper.

Most, if not all, Japanese language references are currently ignored in 
citation analysis, this science is considered non-existent. The paper, and the 
references.

https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jssp/30/1/30_30.1/_article/references


  *   Gibb, R., Ercoline, B., & Scharff, L. (2011). Spatial disorientation: 
Decades of pilot fatalities. Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine, 82, 
717–724.<https://jlc.jst.go.jp/DN/JALC/10007449771?type=list&lang=en&from=J-STAGE&dispptn=1>
  *   Howard, I. P. (1982). Human visual orientation. John Wiley & Sons.
  *   乾 敏郎・小川健二(2010).認知発達の神経基盤―生後8ヶ月まで― 心理学評論,52, 576–608.
  *   石井正則(1998).神経・前庭系・空間識について 宇宙開発事業団(編) 宇宙医学・生理学(III-A) 社会保険出版社 pp. 29–41.
  *   Kanas, N. & Manzey, D. (2008). Space psychology and psychiatry (2nd ed.). 
Springer.
  *   木下冨雄(1993).相対判断の理論―意味、基準系、動き― 京都大学定年退官記念講演録
  *   木下冨雄(2009).宇宙問題への人文・社会科学からのアプローチ―高等研報告書0804― 国際高等研究所・宇宙航空研究開発機構(編) 国際高等研究所
  *   古賀一男(2011).知覚の正体 河出書房新社
  *   Leonov, A. & Scott, D. (2006). Two sides of the moon. St. Marti's Griffin.
  *   中川久定(2009).第3回インタビュー(対話) 木下冨雄(編著) 宇宙問題への人文・社会科学からのアプローチ―高等研報告書0804― 
国際高等研究所・宇宙航空研究開発機構 pp. 376–378.
  *   牧野達郎・下條信輔・古賀一男(1998).知覚の可塑性と行動適応 ブレーン出版
  *   宮辻和貴・田辺 智・金子公宥(2005).宇宙船内「体操」のエネルギー消費量に関する研究 体育学研究,50, 201–206.
  *   Oman, C. M. (2003). Human visual orientation in weightlessness. In L. 
Harris & M. Jenkin, (Eds.), Levels of Perception. New York, Springer Verlag. 
pp. 375–398.
  *   Ross, H. E. (1974). Behaviour and perception in strange environments. 
Allen and Unwin.
  *   Small, R. L., Oman, C. M., & Jones, T. D. (2012). Space shuttle flight 
crew spatial orientation survey results. Aviation, Space, and Environmental 
Medicine, 83, 
383–387.<https://jlc.jst.go.jp/DN/JALC/10011723096?type=list&lang=en&from=J-STAGE&dispptn=1>
  *   立花正一(2009).人類が宇宙に居住するための医学・精神心理の課題 
木下冨雄(編著)宇宙問題への人文・社会科学からのアプローチ―高等研報告書0804― 国際高等研究所・宇宙航空研究開発機構 pp. 258–259.
  *   立花 隆(1983).宇宙からの帰還 中央公論社
  *   Vakoch, D. A. (Ed.) (2011). Psychology of space exploration, contemporary 
research in historical perspective. National Aeronautics and Space 
Administration. pp. 85–86.







From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Éric Archambault
Sent: April-29-15 5:40 PM
To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
Subject: [GOAL] Re: Number of Open Access journals

Paul

I think librarians are still highly concerned about journals, as opposed to 
papers. The reason is that this is how their invoices are structured – they buy 
journals and now bunches of journals. But this is changing because end-users 
increasingly do not see journals, they see results in the Web of Science, 
Scopus, Google Scholar, and universities’ discovery systems. These results are 
usually smaller, more atomistic units -  they are papers, conference papers, 
book chapters, etc.

Thus, the use of search engines, as opposed to browsing on the shelves of 
libraries is progressively shifting the relevant unit towards papers as opposed 
to journals. Still, journals will continue to play a very important role as 
they confer prestige to papers, and guide authors’ and readers’ decisions.


From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Uhlir, Paul
Sent: April-29-15 4:09 PM
To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
Subject: [GOAL] Re: Number of Open Access journals

Good question. And while we're at it, why after 20 years do we still use a 
stovepiped, disaggregated, print model construct as the primary vehicle for 
digitally networked scholarly communication?

Paul F. Uhlir, J.D.
Scholar, National Academy of Sciences, and
Consultant, Data Policy and Management
4643 Aspen Hill Court
Annandale, VA 22003
USA
Tel. 703 941 0817; Cell +1 703 217 5143
Skype: pfuhlir; Email: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Web: http://www.paulfuhlir.com<http://www.paulfuhlir.com/>; Twitter: @paulfuhlir

________________________________
From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jacinto Dávila 
[[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, April 29, 2015 12:54 PM
To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
Subject: [GOAL] Re: Number of Open Access journals

May I ask a  couple of naïve questions?

Why do we count journals? If we are all looking forward to a global, hopefully 
distributed archive of knowledge, shouldn't we counting papers or some other 
way of displaying solutions?
El 29/4/2015 11:13, "Bosman, J.M. (Jeroen)" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> escribió:
I’ve always been amazed how Thomson/ISI  categorized English language journals 
(mostly published in de US/UK) as “international journals” and all other 
journals as “regional journals”. Should ask them.

BTW Eric could you elaborate on what you say in your last sentence?  Will 
Science Metrix launch a bibliometrics service based on GS data or do I have to 
interpret your words in another way?

Jeroen

[101-innovations-icon-very-small]  101 innovations in scholarly 
communication<http://innoscholcomm.silk.co/>
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jeroen Bosman, faculty liaison for the Faculty of Geosciences
Utrecht University Library<http://www.uu.nl/library>
email: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
telephone: +31.30.2536613<tel:%2B31.30.2536613>
mail: Postbus 80124, 3508 TC, Utrecht, The Netherlands
visiting address: room 2.50, Heidelberglaan 3, Utrecht
web: Jeroen 
Bosman<http://www.uu.nl/university/library/en/disciplines/geo/Pages/ContactBosman.aspx>
twitter @jeroenbosman/ @geolibrarianUBU
profiles: : Academia<http://uu.academia.edu/JeroenBosman> / Google 
Scholar<http://scholar.google.com/citations?user=-IfPy3IAAAAJ&hl=en> / 
ISNI<http://www.isni.org/0000000028810209> /
Mendeley<http://www.mendeley.com/profiles/jeroen-bosman/> / 
MicrosoftAcademic<http://academic.research.microsoft.com/Author/51538592/jeroen-bosman>
 / ORCID<http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5796-2727> / 
ResearcherID<http://www.researcherid.com/ProfileView.action?queryString=KG0UuZjN5WmCiHc%252FMC4oLVEKrQQu%252BpzQ8%252F9yrRrmi8Y%253D&Init=Yes&SrcApp=CR&returnCode=ROUTER.Success&SID=N27lOD6EgipnADLnAbK>
 /
ResearchGate<http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jeroen_Bosman/> / 
Scopus<http://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.url?authorId=7003519484> /  
Slideshare<http://www.slideshare.net/hierohiero> /  
VIAF<http://viaf.org/viaf/36099266/> /  
Worldcat<http://www.worldcat.org/wcidentities/lccn-n91-100619>
blogging at: I&M 2.0<http://im2punt0.wordpress.com/> / 
Ref4UU<http://ref4uu.blogspot.com/>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trees say printing is a thing of the past

From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On Behalf Of 
Éric Archambault
Sent: woensdag 29 april 2015 0:08
To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
Subject: [GOAL] Re: Number of Open Access journals

Jean-Claude has an excellent point.

Our current outlook is extremely Western-centric. When I was in SPRU, 
professors (can’t remember if it was Pavitt or Ben Martin) used to joke that 
bibliometric measurement was highly influenced by the linguistic capacity of 
housewives in Philadelphia. Though today there might have been a shift towards 
Manila for data entry, it remains that bibliographic databases present a 
truncated view of the world, and bibliometrics a distorted, 
pro-Western/Northern Hemisphere biased view of science. If one can potentially 
advance the idea that all ground breaking science eventually makes it to 
Western journals, and that this is what current databases are reflecting, it 
would still remain that normal science follows similar rules in Russia, Japan, 
and China and yet a huge part of that content still goes unaccounted for. A 
normal US or UK paper is not any better than a normal Brazilian, Chinese, or 
Russian paper yet the former are frequently counted, the latter more frequently 
not. The low impact of non-Western countries is in part a reflection of the 
exclusion of journals published in non-English speaking countries, and 
Jean-Claude is right to say there are thousands of them.

The effect on measurement is poisonous because national level self-citations 
are frequently excluded when journals are not published in English-language 
journal. If one wants to see the effect of removing national self-citation, try 
removing them altogether and you’ll see how badly clobbered the US ends-up in 
terms of relate impact. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not suggesting to measure that 
way as it would be unwise (I always advocate the inclusion of self-citations at 
all levels even though everyone knows some authors and journals are 
narcissistic and playing the number game – self citations are an essential part 
of the knowledge-building edifice and excluding them potentially create more 
problems than it solves), but it is a valid experiment to show how bad the 
situation currently is because we count only publications from half of the 
journals published, and that half is anything but randomly selected. For those 
who want to see the effect, I can send you a table – among countries with 
45,000 papers or more, and adjusted for scale, the US ranked 22nd (after Japan, 
the Czech Republic and Mexico) if only citations from other countries were 
included. We never published that paper as we thought it was brain damaged to 
exclude national self-citation. Yet, by excluding many many locally published 
journals from citation counts, this is what the advanced analytics that come 
out of dominant bibliographic databases do, and this is a sin that we, 
bibliometricians, commit every day.

Hopefully open access will play a huge role in reducing the distortion field. I 
can confirm there is more than 50,000 scholarly and scientific journals the 
world over, not by any measure all open access, but all peer or quality 
reviewed according to the norms of scholarly and scientific communication in 
all fields of academia. Stay tuned, more neutral metrics are going to be 
available in the near future.

Eric Archambault

From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jean-Claude Guédon
Sent: April-28-15 9:07 AM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [GOAL] Number of Open Access journals

I have repeatedly criticized the numbers of journals used to describe 
scientific and scholarly publishing in the world. I have also regularly 
criticized the use of lists such as the Web of Science, Scopus and Ulrich's as 
being largely centred on the North Atlantic and/or OECD countries.As a counter 
to such numbers, I have pointed out that Latin America alone, as indicated by 
the Latindex vetted list, can sport over 6,000 titles. Presumably, if Asia and 
Africa did the same kind of work, numbers of 25-27,000 titles for the whole 
world would look funny.

Another way to look at this is through disciplines or study areas. No one, I 
suspect, would argue that Classics (Latin and Greek) is a large speciality in 
the world of learning. Typically, classics departments are small and tend to 
disappear. Nonetheless, one can find a list of 1498 journal in this field, and 
that list is limited to open access journals.

http://ancientworldonline.blogspot.ca/2012/07/alphabetical-list-of-open-access.html

The list dates from the summer of 2012. There may be a few more or a few less 
since, but the least one may add is that such a number reveals a publishing 
activity that reaches well beyond expectations (at least mine).

Conclusion: scholarly journal publishing is a lot more complex than what is 
provided by most scientometric studies.

And a final question: who is advantaged by the illusory simplicity of the 
publishing landscape?
--



Jean-Claude Guédon

Professeur titulaire

Littérature comparée

Université de Montréal



_______________________________________________
GOAL mailing list
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
http://mailman.ecs.soton.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/goal
________________________________
No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com<http://www.avg.com>
Version: 2015.0.5863 / Virus Database: 4331/9577 - Release Date: 04/19/15
Internal Virus Database is out of date.
________________________________
No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com<http://www.avg.com>
Version: 2015.0.5863 / Virus Database: 4331/9577 - Release Date: 04/19/15
Internal Virus Database is out of date.
_______________________________________________
GOAL mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.ecs.soton.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/goal

Reply via email to