The Use And Misuse Of Bibliometric Indices In Evaluating Scholarly Performance
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Ethics In Science And Environmental Politics (ESEP)
ESEP Theme Section: The Use And Misuse Of Bibliometric Indices In
Evaluating Scholarly Performance + accompanying Discussion Forum
Editors: Howard I. Browman, Konstantinos I. Stergiou
Quantifying the relative performance of
individual scholars, groups of scholars,
departments, institutions,
provinces/states/regions and countries has
become an integral part of decision-making
over research policy, funding allocations,
awarding of grants, faculty hirings, and
claims for promotion and tenure. Bibliometric
indices (based mainly upon citation counts),
such as the h-index and the journal impact
factor, are heavily relied upon in such
assessments. There is a growing consensus,
and a deep concern, that these indices ?
more-and-more often used as a replacement for
the informed judgement of peers ? are
misunderstood and are, therefore, often
misinterpreted and misused. The articles in
this ESEP Theme Section present a range of
perspectives on these issues. Alternative
approaches, tools and metrics that will
hopefully lead to a more balanced role for
these instruments are presented.
Browman HI, Stergiou KI INTRODUCTION: Factors and indices
are one thing, deciding who is scholarly, why they are
scholarly, and the relative value of their scholarship is
something else entirely
ESEP 8:1-3
Campbell P Escape from the impact factor
ESEP 8:5-7
Lawrence PA Lost in publication: how measurement harms
science
ESEP 8:9-11
Todd PA, Ladle RJ Hidden dangers of a 'citation culture'
ESEP 8:13-16
Taylor M, Perakakis P, Trachana V The siege of science
ESEP 8:17-40
Cheung WWL The economics of post-doc publishing
ESEP 8:41-44
Tsikliras AC Chasing after the high impact
ESEP 8:45-47
Zitt M, Bassecoulard E Challenges for scientometric
indicators: data demining, knowledge flows measurements
and diversity issues
ESEP 8:49-60
Harzing AWK, van der Wal R Google Scholar as a new source
for citation analysis
ESEP 8:61-73
Pauly D, Stergiou KI Re-interpretation of 'influence
weight' as a citation-based Index of New Knowledge (INK)
ESEP 8:75-78
Giske J Benefitting from bibliometry
ESEP 8:79-81
Butler L Using a balanced approach to bibliometrics:
quantitative performance measures in the Australian
Research Quality Framework
ESEP 8:83-92
Erratum
Bornmann L, Mutz R, Neuhaus C, Daniel HD Citation counts
for research evaluation: standards of good practice for
analyzing bibliometric data and presenting and
interpreting results
ESEP 8:93-102
Harnad S Validating research performance metrics against
peer rankings
ESEP 8:103-107
Received on Tue Aug 12 2008 - 04:29:11 BST
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