introduction to altmetrics for medical and special librarians
DESCRIPTION
Altmetrics (or alternative citation metrics) provide new ways to track scholarly influence across a wide range of media and platforms. This presentation covers altmetric fundamentals, tips on connecting your users with altmetrics, and an overview of newly published research. Presented as part of the NN/LM MAR Boost Box Series; http://nnlm.gov/mar/training/boost_mar2014.pdfTRANSCRIPT
Introduction to Altmetrics for Medical and Special Librarians
Linda M. Galloway, MLISLibrarian for Biology, Chemistry and ForensicsBibliographer for the Sciences & Technology
Syracuse University Library, Syracuse, NY
NN/LM MAR Boost Box SeriesMarch 2014
About Me…• Librarian/subject specialist for Biology,
Chemistry & Forensic Science• Evaluate and select content , help people
access the content they need, teach, create web content, various librarian duties
• B.S. Chemistry, MSLIS from Syracuse University
• Bibliographer for Sciences & Technology • Email: [email protected]
What are Altmetrics??“the study of scholarly impact measures based on activity in online tools and environments”
(Priem, Groth, and Taraborelli 2012
citable and accessible products not limited to publications, data sets, software, patents, and copyrights (“Grant Proposal
Guide, Chapter II” 2013)
Traditional Scholarly Metrics
Quantifying Scholarly Output
via Citation Metrics
Number of PublicationsCitations to Publications
Relative influence of Publications
Traditional ToolsArticle Level Metrics
• Citations to an individual article– Web of Science– Scopus– Google Scholar
• h-index– measures both the productivity and impact of the
published work– Number of an author’s papers that have been cited at
least h times by other publications
Traditional Tools Journal Level Metrics
• Impact Factor – Journal Citation Reports– Avg. time articles from a journal (past 2 yrs.) are
cited in past year.– Web of Science indexed journals & data
• SCImago Journal & Country Rank– Based on Scopus Data, 1996-– Uses GooglePage Rank algorithim– Citable increments include past 3 years– Open Access
Note: there are other indices and measures available within these resources.
What data does a typical researcher/faculty member need?
# Citable products# Citations to those productsh-IndexOther measures of success and influence
Documents: 30Citations: 253H-index: 92009-2014, 3/5/2014
Scholarly Metrics as a proxy for Scholarly Influence…
Documents: 72Citations: 445H-index: 11Since 2009, 3/5/2014
Scholarly Metrics as a proxy for Scholarly Influence…
Limitations to Traditional Metrics
• Take a long time to accumulate• Often behind pay walls• Measure influence narrowly• Don’t capture a publication’s impact or
influence in emerging forms of scholarly communication
• Variability depending on database used to calculate metrics
Altmetrics
Measure diverse impacts from articles, datasets, blog posts, slide shows, etc.
Beyond citation counts!Readership
ViewsSaves
DownloadsScholarly (or popular) Buzz
What can be measured?
“Evidence of Use” – http://impactstory.org
• # of Tweets • # of “Saves” in online reference managers• Scholarly (and popular) blog interest and
activity• Activity in social networking platforms, tools• And…
Meaningful Interactions
CiteULikeDeliciousF1000GitHubMendeleySlideShareTwitter Zotero
What is tracked??
DiscussionsSavesCitationsRecommendationsDownloadsCopies
Altmetrics measures diverse impacts from articles, datasets, blog posts, slide shows, etc.
Altmetric Toolstrack readership & influence
Academia.edu is a platform for academics to share research papers and interests.
CiteULike permits users to store, organize and share scholarly papers
F1000 is a subscription-based recommendation service for curated articles in biology and medicine.
Social networking tools
Altmetric Toolstrack readership & influence
Google Scholar Citations is a service that allows authors to track their publications and influence using Google Scholar metrics. Mendeley is a free reference manager and social network that was recently acquired by Elsevier. Mendeley is described as “one of the world’s largest crowd-sourced research catalogs” Zotero is a robust and growing citation management and sharing resource. Collaborators can share libraries of references, etc.
Make Sense of the Diversity of Research Outputs
Use an aggregator!
Harvest dataAutomatic updates
Showcase scholarly influence
Tools to gather data
Commercial• Altmetric.com –owned by Macmillan Publishers
(also owns the Nature Publishing Group). “Provides article level metrics for researchers and publishers”
• Plum Analytics – startup co-founded by former Summon developers; recently acquired by EBSCO. Collects article-level data for use by different constituencies to compare individuals, departments, universities.
Tools to gather data
Commercial• Mendeley.com – Reference manager, .pdf organizer &
social networking tool for researchers/authors. Collects & displays altmetrics. Recently purchased by Elsevier.
“Mendeley Institutional Edition (MIE) is an analytics tool built on top of Mendeley that helps librarians, research directors and other admins to understand the research activity and scholarship output of their community and to facilitate collaboration within it (Mendeley.com).”
Tools to gather data
Non-profit
• ImpactStory – designed for the individual researcher, tools to visualize impact of research products. Helps “researchers to tell data-driven stories about their impacts” (ImpactStory, 2014).
Images: blog.impactstory.org, chemconnector.com
ImpactStory
Altmetric.com report linked from database citation
PlumXTM - Library Journal’s Most Ambitious Database of 2013
Engaging your users…
Engaging Constituents
• Don’t assume anyone knows anything about altmetrics
• New (tenure track) scholars & clinicians• Explain limitations of both traditional citation
metrics & altmetrics• Demonstrate the power of a Google Scholar
Profile, institutional profile, and an ImpactStory Profile
Scholars’ Engagement with Social Media
• Important to maintain and manage an online presence
• Outreach to the public – broader impacts criteria – required by some funding agencies
• Mentions in social media seem to lead to enhanced use of publications
• Dizzying array of social media tools
Strategy for Scientific Social Networking
Goals
1. Choose one or two primary platforms– Institutional platform & Google Scholar
2. Accurate attribution of research products– ORCID and other identifiers
3. Keep profile(s) up to date4. Regularly monitor scientific social networks
The “best” social network depends on the discipline and individual preferences.
Platforms:To showcase and highlight research products
Institutional Profiling Service Google Scholar
Valid data = Valid metrics
• Accurate attribution is essential!• Scholarly authors are assigned Scopus Author
Identifiers, Web of Science Researcher ID’s, etc.
• Scholars can claim and make public their Google Scholar profile
• Scholars can (and should) register for a unique ORCID number – can use this identifier when publishing
ORCID
Open Researcher Identifier
Free service that assigns a unique number to each author and links other identification
schemes.
Encourage researchers to use consistent naming conventions and register for an ORCID ID!
Problem: author disambiguation
John F. Dannenhoffer IIISyracuse University
Joan V. DannenhofferSyracuse University
John F. Dannenhoffer IVPhD Candidate, University of Michigan
Joanne V. Dannenhoffer M.D. May 2013
Joanne M. DannenhofferCentral Michigan University
(spouses) (siblings)
(siblings)
Databases see all of these people as:
J DannenhofferJV DannenhofferJF DannenhofferJM Dannenhoffer
Keep profiles up-to-date
• Great deal of unpublished work can be harvested and promoted
• Immediate data can be provided• Recognize that open profiles are the first
impression of both you and your research
What’s new in Altmetrics?
“Altmetrics … give early estimates of the impact of publications or [to] give estimates of non-traditional types of
impact “ (Sud, 2014).
Published literature increasing
Query: altmetrics or citation metricsQuery: altmetrics OR “citation metrics” – in Title-Abstract-Keyword
Vendors capturing & displaying data
New literature
Altmetrics: A 21st-century solution to determining research quality
• Basic overview of altmetrics & citation metrics• Author provides types of altmetrics and their
correlation to citation counts (via published articles)
• An article’s DOI can be used on ImpactStory to discover article’s metrics.
Konkiel, S. (2013). Altmetrics: A 21st-century solution to determining research quality. Online Searcher, 37(4), 10-15.
Evaluating altmetrics
• Altmetrics are important b/c they give early estimates of an article’s impact.
• Citations from the social web may indicate value oriented more towards applications than pure scientific utility.
• Describes statistical methods to evaluate relationship between altmetrics & established tools.
Sud, P., & Thelwall, M. (2014). Evaluating altmetrics. Scientometrics, 98(2), 1131-1143.
Coverage and adoption of altmetrics sources in the bibliometric community
• Reviews current altmetrics literature• Examined used & coverage of social media in
bibliometricians. (quantitatively analyze academic literature).
• Makes the argument that “total readership” is important b/c it reflects pure (non-publishing) uses of publications – docs applied to daily work, support teaching, societal effects
Haustein, Stefanie, Isabella Peters, Judit Bar-Ilan, Jason Priem, Hadas Shema, and Jens Terliesner. "Coverage and adoption of altmetrics sources in the bibliometric community." arXiv preprint arXiv:1304.7300 (2013).
Do altmetrics correlate with citations? Extensive comparison of altmetric indicators with citations from a multidisciplinary perspective
• An extensive article!• Large study of 718,315 publications from Web
of Science with altmetric indicators provided by Altmetric.com (excluded Mendeley)
• Used Pearson’s correlation analysis to find connection between altmetrics & bibliometrics
Costas, R., Zahedi, Z., & Wouters, P. (2014). Do altmetrics correlate with citations? Extensive comparison of altmetric indicators with citations from a multidisciplinary perspective. arXiv preprint arXiv:1401.4321.
Do altmetrics correlate with citations? Extensive comparison of altmetric indicators with citations from a multidisciplinary perspective
• Altmetric counts are low (15-24%)& not very frequent in scientific pubs, although presence is increasing
• Social sciences, humanities, and medical & life sciences had highest presence of altmetrics
• Found positive weak correlation between altmetrics & citations – reflecting that altmetrics do not capture the same concepts of impact
• Altmetrics are valued as a complementary tool of citation analysis
Altmetrics & ResearchersMetrics and their relationship to social media:
• Add value to traditionally published content– Crowdsourced peer review– Expose questions and comments– Enhance worth
• Increase readership• Appear to follow the pattern of traditional
metrics
Thank you!!Linda GallowayContributors: Janet PeaseAnne Rauh
Syracuse University Library
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