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York Business Librarian validates altmetrics for research impact evaluation

Xuemei LiBusiness librarian Xuemei Li has become one of the first librarians to ever have a study validating the usefulness of altmetrics published in an academic journal. Her first research study was published in April, 2012 in Scientometrics and Li’s second study was accepted by the 17th International Conference on Science and Technology Indicators which will be taking place in September 2012.

Altmetrics is the study of social media metrics used for analyzing and informing scholarship. “Researchers are integrating various social media tools such as blogs, wikis, Twitter, and social bookmarks into their research processes to save, organize, share, and disseminate various research sources. It is even more difficult for traditional bibliometric indicators to capture the totality of research influence on the web,” Li explains. “Nevertheless, the traces left by researchers and the general public through those social media tools hold big potential for measuring different research influences, and this is what altmetrics aims to measure. Altmetrics can be used to complement traditional citation-based measurements.”

Li’s first study of altmetrics sampled 1613 papers published in Nature and Science in 2007 and compared citations with reader counts. Li found significant statistical correlations between citations from Web of Science and Google Scholar and reader counts from the social media bookmark tools CiteULike and Mendeley. The findings suggest that the type of scholarly influence one’s research has, as measured by these social media tools, is related to traditional citation-based impact.

Li’s second study compared nearly 1400 Faculty of 1000 (F1000) post-publication peer reviews, and Mendeley usage data, with traditional bibliometric indicators. This study suggests that F1000 –a database that stores only the best quality biomedical articles after they’ve been published, as selected by over 10,000 faculty members worldwide – is good at acknowledging the merit of an article from (the F1000) experts’ point of view while Mendeley reader counts are more closely related to citation counts. 

“Faculty are striving to demonstrate the impact of their research in a world where the web has become a critical communications channel,” explains Cynthia Archer, York University librarian. “Li’s ground-breaking research serves to validate the usefulness of social media based altmetrics to monitor and track faculty research impact.”

Li and other researchers are working hard to identify, monitor, and evaluate potential social media tools towards building reliable altmetric indicators.

 

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Archives and the Web

University Archivist and head of the Clara Thomas Archives and Special Collections Michael Moir gave a talk  on “Archives and the Web” as part of the Research Frontiers series.

The Internet has cast a bright light on the holdings of many archival repositories as institutions seek to meet the demand for substantive virtual content, but use of this technology has raised concerns as well as opportunities. This session will explore the use of the web by archival programs on a local, national, and international basis, issues associated with searching and use of our collective memory, and the future of documents as artifacts in a digital age.

Anyone interested in getting his PowerPoint slides should e-mail him at mmoir@yorku.ca.