The OA impact bibliography has a section on Web tools for measuring impact
http://opcit.eprints.org/oacitation-biblio.html#tools
Yes, there are citation search and impact services for OA archives
and IRs, but none that are both focussed exclusively on such
repositories and (probably) comprehensive. The latter is qualified
since it is not always easy to tell what the coverage of such
services is, as the numerous reviewers who are cited here will testify.
Les Carr has given the reason for the gaps. The nature of citation
services is they must find a critical mass of cross-linking content,
usually within a subject area, to be effective. The result is that
where such services are aimed at OA archives and IRs they are tending
to develop pragmatically as content levels improve and critical masses
emerge.
Steve Hitchcock
IAM Group, School of Electronics and Computer Science
University of Southampton, SO17 1BJ, UK
Email: sh94r_at_ecs.soton.ac.uk
Tel: +44 (0)23 8059 7698 Fax: +44 (0)23 8059 2865
At 12:45 26/05/2008, Les Carr wrote:
> On 26 May 2008, at 10:48, N. Miradon wrote:
>
> > And if scOApus does _not_ exist, how much coding effort would be
> > required to
> > at least make a start? Could a Google Summer of Code make a first
> > step?
>
> While OA stands at 15% or less, there is very little point in putting
> a citation-following interface to just the OA parts of the literature
> (that would be one or two linked citations per paper).
> ---
> Les Carr
At 10:48 26/05/2008, N. Miradon wrote:
> I've just discovered Scopus, "the world's largest abstract and citation
> database of research literature and quality web sources" [0].
>
> Scopus offers a very nice interface to browse the literature; e.g. to
> search
> for papers, to follow along backwards from each paper to its references,
> or
> forwards from each paper to the papers that cite it, to output the results
> in RIF etc format, to download the pdfs, etc etc.
>
> But although Scopus covers over 500 OA journals, you can only get into
> Scopus if your institution has taken out a Scopus subscription.
>
> Question - does a similar facility exist for browsing OA archives and IRs?
> I
> couldn't find anything in "Eprints.org Software: a Review" or in "A Guide
> to
> Institutional Repository Software" [1,2].
>
> And if scOApus does _not_ exist, how much coding effort would be required
> to
> at least make a start? Could a Google Summer of Code make a first step?
>
> i.e. What are we waiting for?
>
> N Miradon
>
> [0] http://www.scopus.com
>
> [1] http://caltechlib.library.caltech.edu/15/00/SPARC-EprintsReview.pdf
> via
> http://listserver.sigmaxi.org/sc/wa.exe?A2=ind08&L=american-scientist-open
> -access-forum&D=1&O=D&F=l&S=&P=37137
>
> [2] http://www.soros.org/openaccess/pdf/OSI_Guide_to_IR_Software_v3.pdf
> http://www.soros.org/openaccess/pdf/OSI_Guide_to_IR_Software_Table_v3.pdf
Received on Tue May 27 2008 - 12:48:26 BST