A Bibliometric Analysis of Select Information Science Print and Electronic Journals in the 1990s

Wallace Koehler, Paulita Aguilar, Sharon Finarelli, Charles Gaunce, Susan Hatchette, Rebecca Heydon, Emily McEwen, Wendy Mahsetky-Poolaw, Charles T. Melson, Rory Patterson, Mark Stahl, Mary Ann Walker, JoAnna Wall, Gabe Wingfield

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

Abstract

This paper examines three e-journals and one paper journal begun in the 1990s within the information science genre. In addition, these journals are compared to what is perhaps the leading information science journal, one that has been published continuously for fifty years. The journals we examine are CyberMetrics , Information Research , the Journal of Internet Cataloging , Libres, and the Journal of the American Society for Information Science. We find that there are a number of important differences among the journals. These include frequency of publication, publication size, number of authors, and the funding status of articles. We also find differences among journals for distributions of authors by gender and corporate authors by region. Some of the regional differences can be explained by journal maturation -- the more mature the journal the greater the dispersion. We also find that women are more likely to publish in the newer journals than in JASIS . The fact that a journal is or is not an e-journal does not appear to affect its presence or "behaviour" as an information science journal.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalInformation Research
Volume6
Issue number1
StatePublished - Oct 1 2000
Externally publishedYes

Disciplines

  • Library and Information Science

Cite this