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ALTMETRICS: A MANIFESTO altmetrics: a manifesto. No one can read everything. We rely on filters to make sense of the scholarly literature, but the narrow, traditional filters are being swamped. However, the growth of new, online scholarly tools allows us to make new filters; these altmetrics reflect the broad, rapid impact of scholarship in this burgeoningecosystem
ALTMETRICS14: EXPANDING IMPACTS AND METRICS ALTMETRICS19. BYOR: BRING YOUR OWN RESEARCH The 2019 Altmetrics Workshop Stirling, Scotland • 11 October 2019 Follow @altmetricsWS #altmetrics19 About the Workshop. altmetrics19 is part of the altmetrics workshop series organized since 2011 and will take place in conjunction with the 6 th Altmetrics Conference Stirling Court Hotel, located on the University of Stirling campus (Scotland, UK) on 11 October 2019. ALTMETRICS AND OPEN ACCESS: EXPLORING DRIVERS AND EFFECTS Altmetrics and Open Access: Exploring Drivers and Effects . Nicholas Fraser. 1, Fakhri Momeni. 2, Philipp Mayr. 2, Isabella Peters. 1,3 . 1. ZBW – Leibniz
ALTMETRICS IN THE WILD: USING SOCIAL MEDIA TO EXPLORE Consequently, tracking mentions of scholarly articles across this expanding online landscape could inform new, broader, faster measures of impact, complementing traditional citation metrics. Before this can be done, however, it is important to explore, describe, and characterize the properties of these social media-based metrics or ALTMETRICS17. THE DEPENDENCIES OF ALTMETRICSBECKER SHOES LTD
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ALTMETRICS18. SCIENCE & THE PUBLIC: PUBLIC INTERACTIONS The 2018 Altmetrics Workshop London • 25 September 2018 Follow @altmetricsWS #altmetrics18 About the Workshop. altmetrics18 is part of the altmetrics workshop series organized since 2011 and will take place in conjunction with the 5 th Altmetrics Conference (5:AM) at the School of Advanced Studies, located at Senate House in Bloomsbury, in London on 25 September 2018. THE ALTMETRICS COLLECTION TOOLS – ALTMETRICS.ORG CrowdoMeter is a web service that displays tweets linking to scientific articles, and allows users to add semantic information. CrowdoMeter uses a subset of the Citation Typing Ontology ( CiTO ), an ontology for the characterization of citations, both factually and rhetorically. The results of this crowdsourcing effort are displayedin real-time.
ALTMETRICS: A MANIFESTO altmetrics: a manifesto. No one can read everything. We rely on filters to make sense of the scholarly literature, but the narrow, traditional filters are being swamped. However, the growth of new, online scholarly tools allows us to make new filters; these altmetrics reflect the broad, rapid impact of scholarship in this burgeoningecosystem
ALTMETRICS14: EXPANDING IMPACTS AND METRICS ALTMETRICS19. BYOR: BRING YOUR OWN RESEARCH The 2019 Altmetrics Workshop Stirling, Scotland • 11 October 2019 Follow @altmetricsWS #altmetrics19 About the Workshop. altmetrics19 is part of the altmetrics workshop series organized since 2011 and will take place in conjunction with the 6 th Altmetrics Conference Stirling Court Hotel, located on the University of Stirling campus (Scotland, UK) on 11 October 2019. ALTMETRICS AND OPEN ACCESS: EXPLORING DRIVERS AND EFFECTS Altmetrics and Open Access: Exploring Drivers and Effects . Nicholas Fraser. 1, Fakhri Momeni. 2, Philipp Mayr. 2, Isabella Peters. 1,3 . 1. ZBW – Leibniz
ALTMETRICS IN THE WILD: USING SOCIAL MEDIA TO EXPLORE Consequently, tracking mentions of scholarly articles across this expanding online landscape could inform new, broader, faster measures of impact, complementing traditional citation metrics. Before this can be done, however, it is important to explore, describe, and characterize the properties of these social media-based metrics or ALTMETRICS17. THE DEPENDENCIES OF ALTMETRICSBECKER SHOES LTD
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ALTMETRICS18. SCIENCE & THE PUBLIC: PUBLIC INTERACTIONS The 2018 Altmetrics Workshop London • 25 September 2018 Follow @altmetricsWS #altmetrics18 About the Workshop. altmetrics18 is part of the altmetrics workshop series organized since 2011 and will take place in conjunction with the 5 th Altmetrics Conference (5:AM) at the School of Advanced Studies, located at Senate House in Bloomsbury, in London on 25 September 2018.ALTMETRICS20
altmetrics20 is part of the altmetrics workshop series organized since 2011 and will take place in conjunction with the 7th Altmetrics Conference ( 7:AM) hosted online on 21 and 28 October 2020. This year altmetrics20 encourages you to contribute to the workshop by submitting altmetric-related research focusing on the current state of ALTMETRICS19. BYOR: BRING YOUR OWN RESEARCH The 2019 Altmetrics Workshop Stirling, Scotland • 11 October 2019 Follow @altmetricsWS #altmetrics19 About the Workshop. altmetrics19 is part of the altmetrics workshop series organized since 2011 and will take place in conjunction with the 6 th Altmetrics Conference Stirling Court Hotel, located on the University of Stirling campus (Scotland, UK) on 11 October 2019. MEDIA – ALTMETRICS.ORG about; altmetrics: a manifesto; altmetrics11: Tracking scholarly impact on the social Web. Putting Scientometrics 2.0 in its Place Using the Co-Citation Network to Indicate Article Impact ALTMETRICS16. MOVING BEYOND COUNTS: INTEGRATING CONTEXT altmetrics16 is a follow-up to the successful altmetrics11, altmetrics12 , altmetrics14 and altmetrics15 workshops. The workshop is co-organized with the 3rd Altmetrics Conference (3:AM) and will take place on 27 September 2016 at the University of Medicine and Pharmacy Carol Davila in Bucharest, Romania. REPRODUCIBILITY: AN IMPORTANT ALTMETRIC altmetrics12 ACM Web Science Conference 2012 Workshop Evanston, IL, 21 June 2012. Elizabeth Iorns elizabeth@scienceexchange.com ScienceExchange, USA
ALTMETRICS18. SCIENCE & THE PUBLIC: PUBLIC INTERACTIONS The 2018 Altmetrics Workshop London • 25 September 2018 Follow @altmetricsWS #altmetrics18 About the Workshop. altmetrics18 is part of the altmetrics workshop series organized since 2011 and will take place in conjunction with the 5 th Altmetrics Conference (5:AM) at the School of Advanced Studies, located at Senate House in Bloomsbury, in London on 25 September 2018. BEYOND THE DEPENDENCIES OF ALTMETRICS: CONCEPTUALIZING 5 that these linkages will be very strong. Another option is the ‘Tweeter coupling’ model (graphs on the second row), where Twitter users (tweeters) are coupled based on the number of common scholarly ALTMETRICS11: TRACKING SCHOLARLY IMPACT ON THE SOCIAL WEB The increasing quantity and velocity of scientific output is presenting scholars with a deluge of data. There is growing concern that scholarly output may be swamping traditional mechanisms for both pre-publication filtering (e.g peer review) and postALTMETRICS
altmetrics
CITATION AND READERSHIP “IMPACT” OF ALTMETRICS Citation and readership “impact” of altmetrics Judit Bar-Ilan Department of Information Science, Bar-Ilan University, Israel The altmetrics manifesto was published in October 2010 (Priem, Taraborelli, Groth & THE ALTMETRICS COLLECTION TOOLS – ALTMETRICS.ORG CrowdoMeter is a web service that displays tweets linking to scientific articles, and allows users to add semantic information. CrowdoMeter uses a subset of the Citation Typing Ontology ( CiTO ), an ontology for the characterization of citations, both factually and rhetorically. The results of this crowdsourcing effort are displayedin real-time.
ALTMETRICS: A MANIFESTO altmetrics: a manifesto. No one can read everything. We rely on filters to make sense of the scholarly literature, but the narrow, traditional filters are being swamped. However, the growth of new, online scholarly tools allows us to make new filters; these altmetrics reflect the broad, rapid impact of scholarship in this burgeoningecosystem
ALTMETRICS19. BYOR: BRING YOUR OWN RESEARCH The 2019 Altmetrics Workshop Stirling, Scotland • 11 October 2019 Follow @altmetricsWS #altmetrics19 About the Workshop. altmetrics19 is part of the altmetrics workshop series organized since 2011 and will take place in conjunction with the 6 th Altmetrics Conference Stirling Court Hotel, located on the University of Stirling campus (Scotland, UK) on 11 October 2019. ALTMETRICS14: EXPANDING IMPACTS AND METRICS ALTMETRICS AND OPEN ACCESS: EXPLORING DRIVERS AND EFFECTS Altmetrics and Open Access: Exploring Drivers and Effects . Nicholas Fraser. 1, Fakhri Momeni. 2, Philipp Mayr. 2, Isabella Peters. 1,3 . 1. ZBW – Leibniz
ALTMETRICS IN THE WILD: USING SOCIAL MEDIA TO EXPLORE Consequently, tracking mentions of scholarly articles across this expanding online landscape could inform new, broader, faster measures of impact, complementing traditional citation metrics. Before this can be done, however, it is important to explore, describe, and characterize the properties of these social media-based metrics or ALTMETRICS17. THE DEPENDENCIES OF ALTMETRICSBECKER SHOES LTD
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ALTMETRICS18. SCIENCE & THE PUBLIC: PUBLIC INTERACTIONS The 2018 Altmetrics Workshop London • 25 September 2018 Follow @altmetricsWS #altmetrics18 About the Workshop. altmetrics18 is part of the altmetrics workshop series organized since 2011 and will take place in conjunction with the 5 th Altmetrics Conference (5:AM) at the School of Advanced Studies, located at Senate House in Bloomsbury, in London on 25 September 2018. THE ALTMETRICS COLLECTION TOOLS – ALTMETRICS.ORG CrowdoMeter is a web service that displays tweets linking to scientific articles, and allows users to add semantic information. CrowdoMeter uses a subset of the Citation Typing Ontology ( CiTO ), an ontology for the characterization of citations, both factually and rhetorically. The results of this crowdsourcing effort are displayedin real-time.
ALTMETRICS: A MANIFESTO altmetrics: a manifesto. No one can read everything. We rely on filters to make sense of the scholarly literature, but the narrow, traditional filters are being swamped. However, the growth of new, online scholarly tools allows us to make new filters; these altmetrics reflect the broad, rapid impact of scholarship in this burgeoningecosystem
ALTMETRICS19. BYOR: BRING YOUR OWN RESEARCH The 2019 Altmetrics Workshop Stirling, Scotland • 11 October 2019 Follow @altmetricsWS #altmetrics19 About the Workshop. altmetrics19 is part of the altmetrics workshop series organized since 2011 and will take place in conjunction with the 6 th Altmetrics Conference Stirling Court Hotel, located on the University of Stirling campus (Scotland, UK) on 11 October 2019. ALTMETRICS14: EXPANDING IMPACTS AND METRICS ALTMETRICS AND OPEN ACCESS: EXPLORING DRIVERS AND EFFECTS Altmetrics and Open Access: Exploring Drivers and Effects . Nicholas Fraser. 1, Fakhri Momeni. 2, Philipp Mayr. 2, Isabella Peters. 1,3 . 1. ZBW – Leibniz
ALTMETRICS IN THE WILD: USING SOCIAL MEDIA TO EXPLORE Consequently, tracking mentions of scholarly articles across this expanding online landscape could inform new, broader, faster measures of impact, complementing traditional citation metrics. Before this can be done, however, it is important to explore, describe, and characterize the properties of these social media-based metrics or ALTMETRICS17. THE DEPENDENCIES OF ALTMETRICSBECKER SHOES LTD
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ALTMETRICS18. SCIENCE & THE PUBLIC: PUBLIC INTERACTIONS The 2018 Altmetrics Workshop London • 25 September 2018 Follow @altmetricsWS #altmetrics18 About the Workshop. altmetrics18 is part of the altmetrics workshop series organized since 2011 and will take place in conjunction with the 5 th Altmetrics Conference (5:AM) at the School of Advanced Studies, located at Senate House in Bloomsbury, in London on 25 September 2018.ALTMETRICS20
altmetrics20 is part of the altmetrics workshop series organized since 2011 and will take place in conjunction with the 7th Altmetrics Conference ( 7:AM) hosted online on 21 and 28 October 2020. This year altmetrics20 encourages you to contribute to the workshop by submitting altmetric-related research focusing on the current state of MEDIA – ALTMETRICS.ORG about; altmetrics: a manifesto; altmetrics11: Tracking scholarly impact on the social Web. Putting Scientometrics 2.0 in its Place Using the Co-Citation Network to Indicate Article Impact ALTMETRICS16. MOVING BEYOND COUNTS: INTEGRATING CONTEXT altmetrics16 is a follow-up to the successful altmetrics11, altmetrics12 , altmetrics14 and altmetrics15 workshops. The workshop is co-organized with the 3rd Altmetrics Conference (3:AM) and will take place on 27 September 2016 at the University of Medicine and Pharmacy Carol Davila in Bucharest, Romania. ALTMETRICS18. SCIENCE & THE PUBLIC: PUBLIC INTERACTIONS The 2018 Altmetrics Workshop London • 25 September 2018 Follow @altmetricsWS #altmetrics18 About the Workshop. altmetrics18 is part of the altmetrics workshop series organized since 2011 and will take place in conjunction with the 5 th Altmetrics Conference (5:AM) at the School of Advanced Studies, located at Senate House in Bloomsbury, in London on 25 September 2018. REPRODUCIBILITY: AN IMPORTANT ALTMETRIC altmetrics12 ACM Web Science Conference 2012 Workshop Evanston, IL, 21 June 2012. Elizabeth Iorns elizabeth@scienceexchange.com ScienceExchange, USA
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BEYOND THE DEPENDENCIES OF ALTMETRICS: CONCEPTUALIZING 5 that these linkages will be very strong. Another option is the ‘Tweeter coupling’ model (graphs on the second row), where Twitter users (tweeters) are coupled based on the number of common scholarly ALTMETRICS11: TRACKING SCHOLARLY IMPACT ON THE SOCIAL WEB The increasing quantity and velocity of scientific output is presenting scholars with a deluge of data. There is growing concern that scholarly output may be swamping traditional mechanisms for both pre-publication filtering (e.g peer review) and postALTMETRICS
altmetrics
CITATION AND READERSHIP “IMPACT” OF ALTMETRICS Citation and readership “impact” of altmetrics Judit Bar-Ilan Department of Information Science, Bar-Ilan University, Israel The altmetrics manifesto was published in October 2010 (Priem, Taraborelli, Groth &ALTMETRICS
altmetrics
TOOLS – ALTMETRICS.ORG ImpactStory. ImpactStory is a Web-based application that makes it easy to track the impact of a wide range of research artifacts (such as papers, datasets, slides, research code). The system aggregates impact data from many sources, from Mendeley to GitHub to Twitter and more, and displays it in a single, permalinked report. THE ALTMETRICS COLLECTION ALTMETRICS14: EXPANDING IMPACTS AND METRICS ALTMETRICS IN THE WILD: USING SOCIAL MEDIA TO EXPLORE altmetrics12 ACM Web Science Conference 2012 Workshop Evanston, IL, 21 June 2012. Jason Priem 1 * jp@jasonpriem.org Heather A. Piwowar 2 *hpiwowar@gmail.com
ALTMETRICS: A MANIFESTO altmetrics: a manifesto – altmetrics.org ALTMETRICS17. THE DEPENDENCIES OF ALTMETRICS BEYOND THE DEPENDENCIES OF ALTMETRICS: CONCEPTUALIZING 5 that these linkages will be very strong. Another option is the ‘Tweeter coupling’ model (graphs on the second row), where Twitter users (tweeters) are coupled based on the number of common scholarly BEYOND THE DEPENDENCIES OF ALTMETRICS: CONCEPTUALIZING 2 define heterogeneous couplings as the co-occurrence of linkages based on social media environments and their different elements with scholarly objects. Generalizing heterogeneous couplings From a general perspective, it is possible to establish different types of couplings of co-occurrence based STUDYING THE POSTS ACCUMULATION PATTERNS OF ALTMETRIC.COM 2 date2 of research outputs and post date3 of altmetric records. As to the first publication date, Haustein, Bowman & Costas (2015) made a comparison between five kinds of publication dates that are likely to serve as the proxy for the actual first publication date: online date from the publishers, Altmetric publication date, Altmetric first seen date, first tweet date fromALTMETRICS
altmetrics
TOOLS – ALTMETRICS.ORG ImpactStory. ImpactStory is a Web-based application that makes it easy to track the impact of a wide range of research artifacts (such as papers, datasets, slides, research code). The system aggregates impact data from many sources, from Mendeley to GitHub to Twitter and more, and displays it in a single, permalinked report. THE ALTMETRICS COLLECTION ALTMETRICS14: EXPANDING IMPACTS AND METRICS ALTMETRICS IN THE WILD: USING SOCIAL MEDIA TO EXPLORE altmetrics12 ACM Web Science Conference 2012 Workshop Evanston, IL, 21 June 2012. Jason Priem 1 * jp@jasonpriem.org Heather A. Piwowar 2 *hpiwowar@gmail.com
ALTMETRICS: A MANIFESTO altmetrics: a manifesto – altmetrics.org ALTMETRICS17. THE DEPENDENCIES OF ALTMETRICS BEYOND THE DEPENDENCIES OF ALTMETRICS: CONCEPTUALIZING 5 that these linkages will be very strong. Another option is the ‘Tweeter coupling’ model (graphs on the second row), where Twitter users (tweeters) are coupled based on the number of common scholarly BEYOND THE DEPENDENCIES OF ALTMETRICS: CONCEPTUALIZING 2 define heterogeneous couplings as the co-occurrence of linkages based on social media environments and their different elements with scholarly objects. Generalizing heterogeneous couplings From a general perspective, it is possible to establish different types of couplings of co-occurrence based STUDYING THE POSTS ACCUMULATION PATTERNS OF ALTMETRIC.COM 2 date2 of research outputs and post date3 of altmetric records. As to the first publication date, Haustein, Bowman & Costas (2015) made a comparison between five kinds of publication dates that are likely to serve as the proxy for the actual first publication date: online date from the publishers, Altmetric publication date, Altmetric first seen date, first tweet date from THE ALTMETRICS COLLECTION Browse the collection Call for papers. The huge increase in scientific output is presenting scholars with a deluge of data. There is growing concern that scholarly output may be swamping traditional mechanisms for both pre-publication filtering (e.g. peer review) andALTMETRICS20
About the Workshop. altmetrics20 is part of the altmetrics workshop series organized since 2011 and will take place in conjunction with the 7 th Altmetrics Conference hosted online on 21 and 28 October 2020.. This year altmetrics20 encourages you to contribute to the workshop by submitting altmetric-related research focusing on the current state of altmetrics as it relates to the global ALTMETRICS19. BYOR: BRING YOUR OWN RESEARCH The 2019 Altmetrics Workshop Stirling, Scotland • 11 October 2019 Follow @altmetricsWS #altmetrics19 About the Workshop. altmetrics19 is part of the altmetrics workshop series organized since 2011 and will take place in conjunction with the 6 th Altmetrics Conference Stirling Court Hotel, located on the University of Stirling campus (Scotland, UK) on 11 October 2019. ALTMETRICS: A MANIFESTO about; altmetrics: a manifesto; altmetrics11: Tracking scholarly impact on the social Web. Putting Scientometrics 2.0 in its Place Using the Co-Citation Network to Indicate Article Impact ALTMETRICS16. MOVING BEYOND COUNTS: INTEGRATING CONTEXT The 2016 Altmetrics Workshop Bucharest • 27 September 2016. Follow @altmetrics16. News. The collection of videos from talks given at the AM Conferences (from 2013) and Altmetrics Workshop (from 2016) can be found at the TIB AV-Portal.; altmetrics16 will be live streamed – unfortunately we are currently experiencing technical difficulties!; The program is available. RETRACTIONS FROM ALTMETRIC AND BIBLIOMETRIC PERSPECTIVES 1 Retractions from altmetric and bibliometric perspectives Hadas Shema1, Athanasios Mazarakis1, 2, Oliver Hahn2, and Isabella Peters1,2 h.shema@zbw.eu, A.Mazarakis@zbw.eu, O.Hahn@zbw.eu, I.Peters@zbw.eu 1Web Science, ZBW - Leibniz Information Centre forBECKER SHOES LTD
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TWITTER PRESENCE AND ALTMETRICS COUNTS OF SCIELO BRAZIL 3 the factor of 1,5) higher for those publications in journals with a Twitter account than those from journals without presence in Twitter. The analysis by years showed similar results. Only news counts and proportions in 2015 were slightly higher for journals without Twitter accounts. Regarding the number of followers of the SciELO Journals with presence in Twitter, there are DO TWEETS TO SCIENTIFIC ARTICLES CONTAIN POSITIVE OR Do tweets to scientific articles contain positive or negative sentiments? Natalie Friedrich1, Timothy D. Bowman2 & Stefanie Haustein3 1 natalie.friedrich@hhu.de Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Institute of Linguistics and Information, Department ofInformation
STUDYING THE POSTS ACCUMULATION PATTERNS OF ALTMETRIC.COM 2 date2 of research outputs and post date3 of altmetric records. As to the first publication date, Haustein, Bowman & Costas (2015) made a comparison between five kinds of publication dates that are likely to serve as the proxy for the actual first publication date: online date from the publishers, Altmetric publication date, Altmetric first seen date, first tweet date fromALTMETRICS.ORG
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* altmetrics: a manifesto * altmetrics11: Tracking scholarly impact on the social Web * Putting Scientometrics 2.0 in its Place * Using the Co-Citation Network to Indicate Article Impact * Characteristics of Researchblogging.org science Blogs and Bloggers * UCount: a Community-Driven Approach for Measuring ScientificReputation
* Altmetrics for Eurekometrics * Acknowledging contributions to online expert assistance * Who are we talking about?: the validity of online metrics for commenting on science * Aggregated Erevnametrics: bringing together alt-metrics throughResearch Objects
* Bibliometrics and the Culture of Open Access * Measuring impact in online resources with the CI-number (the CitedIn Number for online impact) * Altmetrics: Peer Evaluation, a case study * The search for alternative metrics for taxonomy * Re-use as Impact: How re-assessing what we mean by “impact” can support improving the return on public investment, develop open research practice, and widen engagement * Relative Trends in Scientific Terms on Twitter* test post
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* Myth vs. reality: Altmetrics and librarians * Consistency among altmetrics data provider/aggregators: What arethe challenges?
* What do we know about Altmetric.com sources? A study of the top 200 blogs and news sites mentioning scholarly outputs * Determining Twitter audiences: Geolocation and number of followers * Metrics and document versions: how should altmetrics providers handle metrics for preprints, author manuscripts, and the publishedversion?
* The meaning of impact in altmetrics * Moving beyond counts: A method for surveying Twitter users * Do tweets to scientific articles contain positive or negativesentiments?
* The positive effect of interdisciplinarity on altmetrics for humanities-related research outputs * Challenges and opportunities for detecting and measuring diffusion of scientific impact across heterogeneous altmetric sources * The need for more sophisticated altmetric indicators: A proposal for the categorization and development of aggregate indicators * Can altmetrics be used as a basis for science policy? * Is there a need for an organisation to curate, maintain, support and promote the effective and ethical use of metrics? * Telling our story: A narrative deconstruction of metrics inresearch assessment
* altmetrics16. Moving beyond counts: integrating context * altmetrics17. The dependencies of altmetrics * altmetrics18. Science & The Public: Public Interactions with Science through the Lens of Social Media * altmetrics19. BYOR: Bring Your Own Research * altmetrics20 – The Future is Now ALTMETRICS: A MANIFESTO No one can read everything. We rely on filters to make sense of the scholarly literature, but the narrow, traditional filters are being swamped. However, the growth of new, online scholarly tools allows us to make new filters; these altmetrics reflect the broad, rapid impact of scholarship in this burgeoning ecosystem. We call for more tools and research based on altmetrics. As the volume of academic literature explodes, scholars rely on filters to select the most relevant and significant sources from the rest. Unfortunately, scholarship’s three main filters for importanceare failing:
* Peer-review has served scholarship well, but is beginning to show its age. It is slow, encourages conventionality, and fails to hold reviewers accountable. Moreover, given that most papers are eventually published somewhere, peer-review fails to limit the volume ofresearch.
* Citation counting measures are useful, but not sufficient. Metrics like the h-index are even slower than peer-review: a work’s first citation can take years . Citation measures are narrow; influential work may remain uncited. These metrics are narrow; they neglect impact outside the academy, and also ignore the context and reasons for citation. * The JIF, which measures journals’ average citations per article, is often incorrectly used to assess the impact of individual articles. It’s troubling that the exact details of the JIF are a tradesecret
,
and that significant gaming isrelatively easy .
TOMORROW’S FILTERS: ALTMETRICS In growing numbers, scholars are moving their everyday work to the web. Online reference managers Zoteroand Mendeley
each claim to store over 40 million articles (making them substantially larger than PubMed); as many as a third of scholars are on Twitter, and a
growing number tend scholarly blogs. These new forms reflect and transmit scholarly impact: that dog-eared (but uncited) article that used to live on a shelf now lives in Mendeley, CiteULike , or Zotero–where we can see and count it. That hallway conversation about a recent finding has moved to blogs and social networks–now, we can listen in. The local genomics dataset has moved to an online repository–now, we can track it. This diverse group of activities forms a composite trace of impact far richer than any available before. We call the elements of this trace altmetrics. ALTMETRICS expand our view of what impact looks like, but also of what’s making the impact. This matters because expressions of scholarship are becoming more diverse. Articles are increasinglyjoined by:
* The sharing of “raw science” like datasets, code, and experimental designs * Semantic publishing or “nanopublication,” where the citeable unit is an argument or passage rather than entire article. * Widespread self-publishing via blogging, microblogging, and comments or annotations on existing work. Because altmetrics are themselves diverse, they’re great for measuring impact in this diverse scholarly ecosystem. In fact, altmetrics will be essential to sift these new forms, since they’re outside the scope of traditional filters. This diversity can also help in measuring the aggregate impact of the research enterprise itself. Altmetrics are fast, using public APIs to gather data in days or weeks. They’re open–not just the data, but the scripts and algorithms that collect and interpret it. Altmetrics look beyond counting and emphasize semantic content like usernames, timestamps, and tags. Altmetrics aren’t citations, nor are they webometrics; although these latter approaches are related to altmetrics, they are relatively slow, unstructured, and closed. HOW CAN ALTMETRICS IMPROVE EXISTING FILTERS? With altmetrics, we can crowdsource peer-review. Instead of waiting months for two opinions, an article’s impact might be assessed by thousands of conversations and bookmarks in a week. In the short term, this is likely to supplement traditional peer-review, perhaps augmenting rapid review in journals like _PLoS ONE _, _BMC Research Notes_, or _BMJ Open
_. In the future, greater participation and better systems for identifying expert contributors may allow peer review to be performed entirely from altmetrics.Unlike
the JIF, altmetrics reflect the impact of the article itself, not its venue. Unlike citation metrics, altmetrics will track impact outside the academy, impact of influential but uncited work, and impact from sources that aren’t peer-reviewed. Some have suggested altmetrics would be too easy to game; we argue the opposite. The JIF is appallingly open to manipulation; mature altmetrics
systems could be more robust, leveraging the diversity of of altmetrics and statistical power of big data to algorithmically detect and correct for fraudulent activity. This approach already works for online advertisers, social news sites, Wikipedia, and search engines. The speed of altmetrics presents the opportunity to create real-time recommendation and collaborative filtering systems: instead of subscribing to dozens of tables-of-contents, a researcher could get a feed of this week’s most significant work in her field. This becomes especially powerful when combined with quick “alt-publications” like blogs or preprint servers, shrinking the communication cycle from years to weeks or days. Faster, broader impact metrics could also play a role in funding and promotion decisions. ROAD MAP FOR ALTMETRICS Speculation regarding altmetrics (Taraborelli, 2008 ; Neylon and Wu, 2009;
Priem and Hemminger, 2010)
is beginning to yield to empirical investigation and working tools. Priem and Costello (2010) and Groth and Gurney (2010) find citation on Twitter and blogs respectively. ReaderMeter computes impact indicators from readership in reference management systems. Datacite promotes metrics for datasets. Future work must continue along theselines.
Researchers must ask if altmetrics really reflect impact, or just empty buzz. Work should correlate between altmetrics and existing measures, predict citations from altmetrics, and compare altmetrics with expert evaluation. Application designers should continue to build systems to display altmetrics, develop methods to detect and repair gaming, and create metrics for use and reuseof
data. Ultimately, our tools should use the rich semantic data from altmetrics to ask “how and why?” as well as “how many?” Altmetrics are in their early stages; many questions are unanswered. But given the crisis facing existing filters and the rapid evolution of scholarly communication, the speed, richness, and breadth of altmetrics make them worth investing in. Jason Priem , University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill (@jasonpriem ) Dario Taraborelli , Wikimedia Foundation (@readermeter ) Paul Groth , VU University Amsterdam(@pgroth )
Cameron Neylon , Science and Technology Facilities Council (@cameronneylon )How to cite this:
J. Priem, D. Taraborelli, P. Groth, C. Neylon (2010), Altmetrics: A manifesto , 26 October 2010. http://altmetrics.org/manifesto v 1.0 – October 26, 2010 v 1.01 – September 28, 2011: removed dash in alt-metrics22 COMMENTS
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Christina Pikas
Posted October 27, 2010 at 2:28 am | Permalink Great ideas – but with respect to divorcing a metric from the publication venue, I’m skeptical that it’s possible. After all, the Matthew Effect became the long tail in web talk. Also, it might be useful to contrast Altmetrics with usage metrics which are also being proposed as alternatives to traditional citation-based metrics*
Dario
Posted October 28, 2010 at 9:41 am | Permalink Hi Christina, that’s a good point, but author-level metrics (and for what matters any aggregate institution-level measures) are already divorced from individual publication outlets, aren’t they?I discuss what I believe to be the main differences between usage metrics and metrics based on richer usage patterns (such as personal bookmarking/annotation) in my COOP ’08 paper linked above. The bottom line is: usage metrics are the equivalent (in terms of robustness) of 1st generation ranking algorithms based on click-through rates.*
Steve Hitchcock
Posted October 29, 2010 at 12:02 pm | Permalink Nice ideas. Do you mean something like scintilla.nature.com? You end by imploring researchers to invest in alt-metrics, but have not yet answered your own questions on the validity of the new metrics. “Researchers must ask if alt-metrics really reflect impact, or just empty buzz.” That should be the other way round: first show the effect on impact then try to convince researchers. “Work should correlate between alt-metrics and existing measures, predict citations from alt-metrics, and compare alt-metrics with expert evaluation.” This seems to be the way to go.*
Jason Priem
Posted October 29, 2010 at 5:57 pm | Permalink Hi Steve. As I understand, Scintilla filters news and blog posts, but it does it with keywords rather than measuring impact from a variety of sources. So while it’s a cool project, I wouldn’t call it an alt-metrics tool.The early data suggest alt-metrics measure “real” impact (scare quotes because even the citation people will tell you this is tricky to define). Moreover, it’s encouraging that alt-metrics, like citations, are built around native scholarly processes (saving, linking, etc); we’re not asking for popularity votes, we’re observing the ways scholars naturally interact with their work. So alt-metrics show a lot of promise, and we’d like to see more work in this area.We’re not arguing that alt-metrics is ready for prime-time yet. When we suggest it’s time to invest in alt-metrics, we mean just that: let’s start building systems and doing research and see if alt-metrics live up to their promise. Wethink they will.
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Grove Patel
Posted January 18, 2011 at 1:55 pm | Permalink It would have been more honest of you to mention Thomson Reuters response to the Rockefeller University Press article… http://community.thomsonreuters.com/t5/Citation-Impact-Center/Thomson-Scientific-Corrects-Inaccuracies-In-Editorial/ba-p/717/message-uid/717*
jason
Posted January 19, 2011 at 9:52 pm | PermalinkHi Grove,
Thanks for the link to Thomson’s rejoinder to the Rossner, Van Epps and Hill (2007) article “Show me the data,” which we link to above. It’s always nice to have a full perspective on an issue, and there are certainly good arguments for the value of the JIF. However, I disagree that it’s dishonest for us not to link to it, any more than it was dishonest for you to not link to Rosner et. al’s reply to the reply, “Irreproducible results: a response to Thomson Scientific.” Our goal with the manifesto isn’t to put the Journal Impact Factor on trial; that’s been done enough.
Our point, rather, is to present a better, fuller alternative to the way we measure impact now. I think the JIF, as used today, has deep flaws…but even if it didn’t, why not look into ways to understand and track impact even better?*
Julian Newman
Posted June 19, 2011 at 9:12 pm | Permalink It would be kind of helpful to let new readers know what ALT in “alt-metrics” stands for. Is it an acronym for something, or does it just stand for “alternative”? If it only means “alternative” why should we believe the various assertions that are made about alt-metrics? Are we really sure that we want ANY metrics at all, or are these just something to enable bureaucrats toget under our feet?
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jason
Posted June 19, 2011 at 10:31 pm | Permalink Good thought, Julian. The “alt” does indeed stand for “alternative,” and that should be more evident. We’ll change it in the next version of the manifesto (along with losing the hyphen, which has already disappeared from most of our other altmetrics stuffonline).
I don’t think think the term, though, has much to do with the value (or lack thereof) of our assertions. Regardless of what “alt” means, I think it’s increasingly accepted that evaluators (some of whom are “bureaucrats,” but some of whom are fellow scholars on hiring, tenure, and grant committees) and working researchers alike are pretty overwhelmed by the quantity of knowledge being produced. We need ways to get a handle on what’s out there, and what’s good. Traditional metrics, while useful, have let us down because they only give us a few ways to measure “good.” But eschewing _all_ measurement of science is throwing the baby out with the bathwater. As scientists, we measure things all the time; shouldn’t we examine our own work as closely? Rather than getting rid of metrics (which, let’s face it, are not going away), we should be _adding_ metrics, so that we get a messier but richer picture of what’s going on in science. “Impact,” like lots of things, is hard to define and measure. But certainly using new communication technologies to build our understanding of research impact is a better plan than just throwing up our hands and going home.*
Dana Roth
Posted February 14, 2012 at 7:44 pm | Permalink re: “As the volume of academic literature explodes, scholars rely on filters to select the most relevant and significant sources from the rest.” Isn’t another filter the journal in which ‘relevant and significant sources’ are published? Most serious researchers combine perusing journal contents pages with literature searching.*
jason
Posted February 14, 2012 at 8:01 pm | Permalink @Dana, absolutely the journal is a filtering mechanism. I’d maintain it’s a broken one, because requires lots of expensive manual curation, hides valuable research in peer review for a year or more, permits only binary yes/no filtering, and only supports one judgement per article (since you can’t publish in multiple journals). These were all unavoidable bugs in a system built on paper. But there’s no need to suffer them if we built a system on the Web.*
research paper writing service Posted November 15, 2012 at 9:09 am | Permalink It would be kind of helpful to let new readers know what ALT in “alt-metrics” stands for. Is it an acronym for something, or does it just stand for “alternative”? If it only means “alternative” why should we believe the various assertions that are made about alt-metrics? Are we really sure that we want ANY metrics at all, or are these just something to enable bureaucrats toget under our feet?
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Steve Mount
Posted December 24, 2012 at 5:59 pm | Permalink I very much like the general thrust here, especially the two ideas that (1) metrics should be specific to a particular paper rather than tied to the journal that published it and (2) that the internet allows effective community review in many cases. However, I have a concern that an important feature of peer review, which has been under threat for some time, is further endangered. What peer review provides, but which most of the alternatives do not, is the assurance that someone with expertise has read the paper very carefully looking for errors. Assessment “by thousands of conversations and bookmarks in a week” may not involve *anyone* actually taking the time to read the paper carefully. While prominent and important publications that are read (or skimmed) by many will no doubt be read carefully by some, and social media allows us to point to those readers (and contact them if necessary), the vast majority of publications will never be read in detail by anyone (including some ofthe authors).
Of course, even under peer review, a careful reading does not always happen. A careful review takes much more time than a typical reading. Reviewers under pressure to review quickly (and under other pressures as well) are increasingly likely to be less than completely thorough. However, despite this tendency, I know from reading the comments of other reviewers that most papers are in fact carefully evaluated during peer review (still). Put simply, peer review continues to provide an important check that prevents the formation of scientific consensus around suspect data, or around an argument that has not been thoroughly checked by anyone.*
Luiz Felipe Franco Belussi Posted January 12, 2013 at 12:00 pm | Permalink The idea of altmetrics is great, period. But there are some big challenges: one concern is that eventually the media used to gather information and assess impacts (specially blog entries and tweets) is much more susceptible to artificial manipulation (by spam bots and the alike). That’s one more difficulty in the journey to assessing the “”real”” impact of research.*
Ali
Posted February 4, 2013 at 5:05 pm | Permalink Publication and reputation conventions vary by field. In my field (CS) journal articles, while important as a repository for established results, is not what people pay attention to. Rather the focus is on conferences and workshops: peer-reviewed yet reasonably fast dissemination of research. The h-index may appear slow, but there’s also the g-index. I’d much rather have peers who understand the field be a first filter. The claim that this somehow excludes “new” ideas is laughable. New ideas show up all the time, how else would there be any visible progress in science?*
M. A. Eldosuky
Posted April 2, 2014 at 6:56 pm | Permalink Resurrect the Readermeter !!*
Birgit
Posted May 11, 2014 at 3:46 am | Permalink C’est un vrai boոheur de lire ce sitе internet*
dzrlib
Posted August 27, 2014 at 7:52 pm | Permalink The analysis of citation counting seems reasonable, but the denigration of the JIF seems overly harsh. I thought I understood the ‘exact details’ and that while “significant gaming is relatively easy” … it is also easily identified and punitive steps are taken …namely removal from the JIF. The following from the ‘Notices’ section of the JIF:Title Suppressions
Metrics for the titles listed below are not published in the 2013 JCR data due to anomalous citation patterns found in the 2013 citation data. These patterns result in a significant distortion of the Journal Impact Factor and rank that does not accurately reflect the journal’s citation performance in the literature. The Journal Impact Factor provides an important and objective measure of a journal’s contribution to scholarly communication. In the interest of fairness and accuracy for all journals, the distortion of the Journal Impact Factor by an excessive concentration of citations gives rise to the need for suppression. JCR staff will monitor these journals going forward and the titles will be included in a future edition of JCR when the anomalous patterns are resolved. Coverage of these journals in Web of Science and other Thomson Reuters products is not immediately affected by suppression from the JCR, however, the titles may be subject to review to determine if they continue to meet the quality and publication standards necessary for inclusion in Web of Science. More information on journal suppression is available at: http://wokinfo.com/media/pdf/jcr-suppression.pdf*
Peter
Posted October 7, 2015 at 1:44 pm | Permalink Thank you “American Libraries” Sep/Oct 2015 issue, for having an article titled “Altmetrics, Bibliometrics” by Robin Roemer & Rachel Borchardt (p.29). Now I feel like I am that much more up to date with the latest & greatest! More please!*
MEDI VIJAY
Posted February 13, 2016 at 6:15 am | PermalinkHi,
The idea article level metrics is great now it is necessary for knowing the impact of a research on public or society. Can any clarify my question how to calculate the article level metrics what methodology using.*
Gopalakrishna
Posted August 21, 2016 at 1:55 pm | Permalink ALTMetrics is gaining momentum and this manifesto nicely captures the fundamental behind it that “no one can read everything”. I recently wrote an article on this from the technology perspective and how bigdata is remodelling the publishing landscape with this altmetrics. It outlines the fundamental problem this bigdata is creating for the authors, publishers and readers; and outlines how altmetrics can solve such problems. For those interested, the article is available at: http://gk.palem.in/blog/altmetrics-big-data-for-publication-industry.html*
Tom Wilson
Posted November 18, 2016 at 11:45 am | Permalink Time to update the Tools list? Most of the links are now dead.*
BARBATI
Posted July 11, 2017 at 12:39 pm | PermalinkHello
Would be interested to get your interest back about the creation of the Video Index Factor that would take into account the video of oral presentation of conferences.489 TRACKBACKS
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By Beyond the PDF – it is time for a workshop | Gobbledygook on November 6, 2010 at 9:47 am posts, etc. The incoming citations are of course very helpful for discovery, and the basis for alternative metrics. This entry was posted in Thoughts and tagged nlm-dtd, pdf. Bookmark the permalink.*
By November 8th at 5pm: New Methods in Scholarship – UNC DigitalScholarship Group
on
November 8, 2010 at 7:02 pm out the alt.metrics manifesto he recently*
By Alt-metrics: a manifesto – altmetrics.org | Science Report | Biology News, Economics News, Computer Science News, Mathematics News, Physics News, Psychology News on December 2, 2010 at 4:27 pm Björn Brembs to Björn's feed, The Life Scientists, Science 2.0 Alt-metrics: a manifesto – altmetrics.org – http://altmetrics.org/manifes…*
By Weekend Reading: Happy Halloween Edition - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Education on December 3, 2010 at 9:38 pm speaking of peer review, here’s a new attempt to measure scholarly impact: Alt-metrics: A Manifesto: These new forms reflect and transmit scholarly impact: that dog-eared (but uncited) articlethat
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By My open access conversion « Anne Peattieon
December 13, 2010 at 6:23 am not. Is there a better way of defining the impact of your research? Definitely. Start with the Alt-Metrics Manifesto if youdon’t believe
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By Quora
on December 13, 2010 at 10:29 pm HOW DO YOU DETERMINE HOW INFLUENTIAL/IMPORTANT A SCIENTIFIC PAPERIS?…
Since we’re just starting to ask this question seriously, it’s the kind of thing that can only be answered retrospectively for now. As we collect more rich activity and attention data of the kind that PLoS and Mendeley are gathering, we’ll learn mo…*
By January 2011 Topicon
December 16, 2010 at 8:38 pm and building prototypes to support this approach. His recent alt-metrics publications include the alt-metrics manifesto, Scientometrics 2.0: Toward new metrics of scholarly impact on the social Web, and How and why*
By Has journal article commenting failed? – Jason Priem on January 7, 2011 at 8:01 am I collected data on PLoS comments as part of a larger investigation of alt-metrics. As evident from the graphic, the number articles with comments has held more or less steady as the*
By my.altmetrics.org: alt-metrics for your CV – Jason Priem on January 15, 2011 at 6:59 am a frontend for our crawler–giving working scholars and funders the opportunity to try out alt-metrics for*
By Reflections from #scio11 Saturday’s “Open Science” Track – Carl Boettiger on January18, 2011 at 1:55 am
broached the idea of altmetrics on several occasions already, our next session dove into the details of how we might construct*
By Alternative metrics at ScienceOnline2011 and beyond « the Undergraduate Science Librarian on January 20, 2011 at 7:25 pm is “What problems are we trying to solve?” I am very familiar with the criticisms of the impact factor, but I’m interested in returning to the basic*
By Nature Essay – Trial by Twitter « Phase Transitions on January 21, 2011 at 8:30 pm altmetrics home Has Journal Commenting Failed Twitter Survey Report (Sept 2010) on scribd More stats for the PLoS*
By Link, don’t pass around files | Book of Trogool on January 25, 2011 at 3:09 pm there’s an impact question to consider. As alternative impact metrics take hold in journal publishing, view and download numbers take on new importance for authors. If*
By Literaturverwaltung „beyond the PDF“ – Ein Forschungsfeld für Bibliotheken?! « Literaturverwaltung & Bibliotheken on January 28, 2011 at 10:54 am Publikationsworkflows: “ Originäre Web-Werkzeuge und -Konzepte wie HTML, Wikis, Weblogs, Alternative Metriken etc. sind grundsätzlich besser dazu geeignet, die Potentiale des Webs für daswissenschaftliche
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By The impact factor game | Science Library on February 17, 2011 at 4:43 am factor of journals should not be used for evaluating research • The misused impact factor • alt-metrics: a manifesto • The mismeasurement of science • Impact factor wars: Episode V–TheEmpire Strikes
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By Dlaczego naukowcy nie współtworzą Wikipedii? « Nauka –Otwarta
on February 24, 2011 at 8:27 am Alt-metrics Manifesto (altmetrics.org)*
By Publisher and Institutional Repository Usage Statistics (PIRUS 2) Research Communications Strategy on February 24, 2011 at 5:10 pm alternative impact metrics (some that PLoS now provides). He cited people such as Jason Priem (see alt-metrics: a manifesto) and commented that changing the focus from Journal to article, would change the publication*
By #altmetrics - Are You Reading Yet? - Stephan Dahl's Blog on March 25, 2011 at 12:43 pm research” possible. With the growing popularity of #altmetrics (or less twitter-like: alt-metrics) it is also starting to make inroads into measuring (academic) research impact (N.B. for thosein
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By Quora
on April 14, 2011 at 10:01 am WHAT ARE SOME GOOD ALTERNATIVES TO GOOGLE SCHOLAR?… Are you interested in conducting search? It’s not there yet: in the category of “free”, google scholar, used together with Harzing’s POP application (http://www.harzing.com/pop.htm), is unbeatable, IMO. But check out current developments under #alt…*
By Beyond Impact » Blog Archive » Software Impact – the differences from datasets on May 5,2011 at 10:14 am
The DataCite consortium are addressing the challenges of making data sets accessible and visible. Alt-Metrics have emerged to suggest alternative views of impact which move away from the more traditional*
By On alternative impact factors and “filtering after the fact” on May 16, 2011 at 9:28 am out by (among others) Jason Priem, PhD student in Information and Library Science on the project Alt-metrics which is about tracking scholarly impact on the social web. Preem and his colleagues wants totrack
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By Joe Paz » Tweets on May 19, 2011 at2:42 am
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By My presentation at the ORCID Meeting – ChemConnector Blog on May 23, 2011 at 2:19 am their SLideshare presentations (that should have ORCIDs for scientists!), and their “AltMetrics“ 4) Aggregating all RSC articles, new and old (with some work on the archive!) under the*
By alt-metrics, a new tool for research assessment « Shamprasad Pujar on June 16, 2011 at 5:43 pm who are fully embracing the possibilities of Web 2.0. This has called for new methods of metrics (altmetrics), which better reflect today’s research practices and take advantage of the use of currentsocial
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By Jason Priem, alt-metrics - IRISCon
June 30, 2011 at 6:52 am – from http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By Random Hacks on
July 2, 2011 at 12:55 pm “Altmetrics” Manifesto: http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By Semantically Mapping Science Project @ VU Amsterdam |juliembirkholz
on July
28, 2011 at 2:10 pm
number of projects on altmetrics including: Julie M. Birkholz and Shenghui Wang (2011) Who are we talking about?: the validity of*
By Are we using the right metrics? — Digital Fingerprint on July 29, 2011 at 9:17 am community has recently emerged in an effort to achieve this. Complete with a manifesto – at altmetrics.org – this community is striving to understand and measure the products and practices ofscholarly
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By Altmetrics | juliembirkholzon July
29, 2011 at 12:06 pm of online metrics for evaluating science; piggy backing on other discussions in the field such as alt-metrics (which Gamble also*
By Many authors have begun to call for investigation… « Dr. DirencSakarya
on August 17, 2011 at 7:35 pm authors have begun to call for investigation of“altmetrics”.
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By Inundata – DataCite 2011, recapon August 26,
2011 at 3:39 am
Related: Altmetrics Manifesto*
By It’s About Time We Discussed the Business of Identity « TheScholarly Kitchen
on September 27, 2011 at 9:31 am are also showing interest in the possibilities of a well-configured identity service. The altmetrics movement is essentially predicated on being able to append various signifiers ofscholarly output
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By Thomson Reuters, Nobel Prize predictions and correlation vs. causation | Digital Brain ; Science and Technology News on October 3, 2011 at 11:30 am aren’t what’s important in science and aren’t the best way to measure impact. The Alt-Metrics project and many other initiatives have sprung up over the last few years looking for better ways*
By Evaluating Research By the Numberson
October 3, 2011 at 9:28 pm then turned to a brief discussion about some of the alternative metrics now being proposed by various journals and publishers. Some of the simplest measures in this*
By ATG Hot Topics of the Week: Altmetrics, My Mother Was Nuts… & More on the Berlin Declaration | Against-the-Grain.com on October 21, 2011 at 3:49 pm At ACRLog, Bonnie Swoger of SUNY Geneseo tells us why some students are interested in impact factors, h-indexes, etc., and points to a manifesto on altmetrics.*
By Graham Steel – Publish or Parish » PhD2Published on October 27, 2011 at 8:32 am Article Level Metrics (ALM) which is a much needed alternative to IF. Also see the likes of http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/, http://beyond-impact.org/ and*
By The promise of another open: Open impact tracking « Research Remix on October 31, 2011 at 6:29 pm collecting and displaying Article-Level Metrics for its articles. Jason Priem and others have articulated the promise of altmetrics and begun digging into what these metrics*
By more about total-Impact « Research Remix on October 31, 2011 at 6:34 pm The Altmetrics Manifesto is a good, easily-readable introduction to this literature, while the proceedings of the recentaltmetrics11 workshop goes into more detail. You can check out the shared altmetrics library on Mendeley for more even relevant research. Finally, the poster Uncovering impacts: CitedIn and total-Impact, two new tools for gathering altmetrics, recently submitted to the 2012 iConference, describes a case study using total-Impact to evaluate a set of research papers funded by NESCent; it has some brief statistical analysis and some visualisations of theresults.
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By Mendeley Binary Battle Top 40 | is it just meon
November 4, 2011 at 10:03 am I especially like the following projects as they could really help making science more open, using alternative metrics or innovative approaches of approaching the whole science*
By Mendeley is announcing the Top 40 of their binary battle « PGPUSHPN Blog
on November 4, 2011 at 10:07 am I especially like the following projects as they could really help making science more open, using alternative metrics or innovative approaches of approaching the whole science*
By BMJ Group blogs: BMJ Web Development Blog » Blog Archive » Tracking scholarly impact on the social web: altmetrics on November 4, 2011 at 2:10 pm scholarly communication. One of the major adherents of this view is Jason Priem, co-founder of the altmetrics project, whose website states: In the 17th century, scholar-publishers created the firstscientific
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By Binary Battle Finalists Announced | The Official PLoS Blog on November 16, 2011 at 7:49 pm Total-Impact fulfills an unmet need for how researchers can collect and display a variety of altmetrics in one place. The app’s contributors (including PLoS authors Heather Piwowar and Egon*
By Scholarly Communication, Social Media and “Altmetrics” | Research Impact: Scholarly Communication @ Carleton University on November 25, 2011 at 5:24 pm Sciences on academics’ use of social media and understanding these sources to inform “altmetrics” (alternative metrics of impact). Share this:TwitterFacebookLike this:LikeBe the first to*
By Beyond Impact Factor: Here Comes “Altmetrics” | The SearchPrinciple blog
on November 27, 2011 at 4:22 pm Priem, D. Taraborelli, P. Groth, C. Neylon (2010), Alt-metrics: A manifesto, (v.1.0), 26 October 2010.*
By Daily post 11/28/2011 : DrAlb on November 28, 2011 at 1:30 pm altmetrics: a manifesto – altmetrics.org*
By Twitter and the new scholarly ecosystem – Jason Priem on November 30, 2011 at 7:01 pm efforts to understand and use these new data sources to inform alternative metrics of impact, or “altmetrics.” Altmetrics could be used in evaluating scholars or institutions, complementingunidimensional
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By Blog Analytic Services for JISC MRD Project Blogs | Innovation Support Centre at UKOLN on December 9, 2011 at 10:37 am altmetrics Web site provides access to altmetrics: a manifesto which describes how “the growth of new, online scholarly tools allows us to make new filters;*
By Mendeley Binary Battle Top 40 | Wolfgang Reinhardton December
13, 2011 at 10:26 am I especially like the following projects as they could really help making science more open, using alternative metrics or innovative approaches of approaching the whole science*
By Alternative metrics in Africa: An Interview with Cameron Neylon - Scholarly Communication in Africa Programme on December 13, 2011 at 3:03 pm thinker in open science, open access and open data. He is one of the original authors of the Altmetrics manifesto, co-author of the Panton Principles for open data in science, and founding Editor-in-Chief of the*
By Beyond Blogging as an Open Practice, What About Associated Open Usage Data? « UK Web Focus on December 14, 2011 at 11:12 am strengths and weaknesses of such analytic tools may be helpful if the altmetrics initiative which, in its manifesto, describes how “the growth of new, online scholarly tools allows us to make newfilters; these
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By Mit kleinem Kreditrahmen? Überlegungen zur Reputationsabbilduing im Nano-Publishing. « LIBREAS.Library Ideas on December 14, 2011 at 6:06 pm Jüngst wies Manuela Schulz im medinfo-Weblog auf die Entwicklungslinie der Altmetrics hin (http://medinfo.netbib.de/archives/2011/12/02/3944), die soziale Netzwerkeffekte – z.B. vernetzte Literaturorganisationssysteme wie Mendeley oder Research Gate, aber auch Twitter – für die Messung eines Impacts nutzen wollen: Die präzise Vernetzbarkeit auch von Dokumententeilen mit konkreten Akteuren lassen feinkörnigere Messverfahren als die Zitationszählung auf Artikelebene zu. Im Altmetrics-Manifesto findet sich dies so angesprochen: „Semantic publishing or “nanopublication,” where the citeable unit is an argument or passage rather than entire article.” (http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/)*
By Final Reports from UKOLN’s Evidence, Impact, Metrics Work « UKWeb Focus
on December 21, 2011 at 2:49 pm can be seen from the altmetrics manifesto the research community has strong interests in developing metrics which can help toidentify
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By Thinkepis sobre herramientas para la evaluación de la I+D en universidades y sobre Google Scholar Citations « Primer cuartil (Q1) on January 3, 2012 at 7:08 am de cara a la evaluacion de la investigación, como Academic Search, de Microsoft o las propuestas alt-metrics. También se ofrece una perspectiva de las novedades introducidas por las principalesempresas: ISI
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By BMJ Group blogs: BMJ Web Development Blog » Blog Archive » Twimpact factors: can tweets really predict citations? on January 6, 2012 at 12:24 pm articles, and replacing them with a list of articles in an appendix. Jason Priem (co-founder of the altmetrics project) commented on Davis’s post, describing the change as “a lovely example of how*
By How Could Twitter Influence Science (And Why Scientists Are onBoard) - Forbes
on January 15, 2012 at 12:57 pm BMJ Group was interested because the Eysenbach paper had caused a stir in the Altmetrics community, a project set up to discuss the post-peer review environment. Peer-review has served scholarship*
By Articles tweeted about are 11 times more likely to be highly cited in journal articles : Real Lawyers Have Blogs on January 16, 2012 at 6:59 pm publication to the web, and publish earlier, the web offers a better way to filter science or as Altmetrics (project set up to discuss the post-peer review environment) puts it: “Instead ofwaiting months
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By You spend hours working on your research, so why not get credit for all of it? | The PostDocs Forum on January 17, 2012 at 5:32 pm traditional measures of impact (i.e. the number of citations), as well as new measurements such as altmetrics, researchers get a greater level of information about the impact and reach of their*
By You spend hours working on your research, so why not get credit for … | research education on January 17, 2012 at 6:50 pm traditional measures of impact (i.e. the number of citations), as well as new measurements such as altmetrics, researchers get a greater level of information about the impact and reach of their*
By Figshare: a new way to publish scientific research data « WellcomeTrust Blog
on January 18, 2012 at 12:54 pm using both traditional measures of impact (i.e. the number of citations) alongside new ones such as altmetrics, Figshare gives researchers a greater level of information, and realtime measurements,of the true
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By Journal News « sharmanediton January
20, 2012 at 3:35 pm
as “an attempted improvement that makes things worse than they already were”. Altmetrics may be on the rise, but it looks like this one won’t be taking*
By ScienceOnline 2012 – It gave me a whole new perspective of science and those involved » Collaborative Chemistry on January 22, 2012 at 3:17 am Images created by these artists deserve citations like papers. The conference exposed me to the altmetrics advances in this area which was eye opening but would be nice if I could track my imagestoo on
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By A Open Archive of My F1000 Reviews « I wish you'd made me angryearlier
on January 28, 2012 at 8:54 pm Research Blogging Network. Hopefully these commentraies will be of use to some and should add to Altmetrics profiles for these papers, using systems like Total*
By » Quantifying impact: A better metric for measuring journalism TheLinchpen
on January 29, 2012 at 10:03 am thread I learned about after the main ideas above formed involves new ways to measure science and altmetrics (and thanks to Jonathan Stray the heads-up on the almetrics*
By Altmetrics « News from JURN.orgon January
30, 2012 at 3:46 pm
Altmetrics: a manifesto…*
By Measuring the influence of scholarship via social media |knowledgebot
on January 30, 2012 at 6:40 pm can now be accessed almost instantaneously via social media. The proponents of altmetrics have a manifesto which asks the question I was thinking while reading the article: How much does the conversation*
By Scholars Seek Better Ways to Track Impact Online | InstituteLibrary News
on January 30, 2012 at 9:09 pm more information about altmetrics, read”Altmetrics: A Manifesto” and follow the discussion on*
By Altmetrics: a manifesto « my memexon
January 31, 2012 at 1:12 pm the Altmetrics manifesto created by UNC graudate student Jason Priem (see more in the Chronicle of Higher Education*
By Scholars Seek Better Ways to Track Impact Online | Research Impact: Scholarly Communication @ Carleton University on January 31, 2012 at 2:55 pm blogged about or bookmarked”. The article talks about Jason Priem (who helped write the altmetrics manifesto) and a new project called Total Impact that, although in its infant stages, is a way tosearch the
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By It Must Be Measured: #Scio12 #Altmetrics | Whizbang on January 31, 2012 at 4:31 pm Science Online I attended a discussion of Alternative Metrics or altmetrics: As the volume of academic literature explodes, scholars rely on filters to select the most*
By On Sharing With the Right People, or Why Online Metrics to Assess "Impact" Should Be Qualitative (Too) | HASTAC on January 31, 2012 at 5:03 pm to how many people or visits or clicks or downloads a given online resource is getting. So-called "altmetrics" and the more-established webometrics or statistical cybermetrics seek to recognise the need of*
By LIS DREaM Workshop 2: London (and Library Day in the Life Day One)| Walk You Home
on January 31, 2012 at 8:20 pm a few different techniques and he explained how they could be applied to LIS, including using altmetrics instead of/as well as traditional citation index searching, for a number of reasons,including the
*
By What’s all the huha about? ‘Altmetrics’: uncovering the invisible in research on February 3, 2012 at 10:46 am There’s been a lot of debate about the validity of impact factors over the years (and there have been many attempts to measure impact but none wholly accurate). Just this week on Twitter, the discussion took off again after the publication of an article by Jennifer Howard entitled “Scholars seek betters ways to track online impact” in The Chronicle of Higher Education (January 29th 2012 ) which highlights the work on “alternative metrics” done by Jason Priem (a graduate student in library sciences at the University of North Carolina) who helped write a manifesto on “altmetrics” (see: http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/).*
By Scholars Seek Better Ways to Track Impact Online « Phx Friends ofUA SIRLS
on February 3, 2012 at 4:01 pm Priem helped write a manifesto, posted on the Web site altmetrics.org, which articulates the problems with traditionalevaluation
*
By Is scientific publishing broken? What can you do to help fix it? | Statistical Epidemiology on February 5, 2012 at 2:04 pm information is made available, we will need ways to evaluate the impact of that research. Altmetrics.org is a good please to start if you are interested in learning*
By Learning From Shared Twitter Links (Before Trunk.ly’s Demise) «UK Web Focus
on February 7, 2012 at 9:30 am I’m pleased that I still have my Delicious account and will be interested to see how the service becomes embedded within Delicious. It will also be interesting to see if the resource sharing capabilities provided by Twitter, and the ways in which such sharing can now be analysed will have a role to play in the development of altmetrics. As described in the altmetrics manifesto:*
By Altmetrics: Evaluación del impacto de los medios sociales |Universo Abierto
on February 9, 2012 at 2:08 pm*
By Impactos alternativos on February 10, 2012 at 8:39 am que genéricamente se denomina altmetrics o métricas alternativas –que incluso tienen su propio manifiesto–, aunque varían bastante entre*
By Altmetrics-Studie: Neue Verfahren wissenschaftlicher Impact-Messung| wisspub.net
on February 11, 2012 at 11:53 am Better Ways to Track Impact Online“) über die Diskussionen zu diesem Thema, die im Kontext des Altmetrics-Manifest geführt werden.Teilen Sie dies
mit:TwitterFacebookDruckenMehrStumbleUponDiggE-MailRedditGefällt*
By Investigación y OpenData « train2manageon
February 13, 2012 at 6:43 am web de los investigadores es cada vez mayor (con iniciativas que miden el impacto en la web, como Altmetrics) y, afortunadamente, no parece que vaya a haber marcha*
By Scholars Seek Better Ways to Track Impact Online | Syazliutm's Blog on February 14, 2012 at 3:37 pm Priem helped write a manifesto, posted on the Web site altmetrics.org, which articulates the problems with traditionalevaluation
*
By ACM Web Science Conference concludes | Web Science Trust on February 15, 2012 at 3:46 pm demanding shorter slots. Three workshops on the Web Science Curriculum, Health Web Science and Altmetrics, preceded the conference as a whole, and a lively poster session demonstrated notonly how many
*
By Another look at ‘altmetrics’ for scholars | The SearchPrinciple blog
on February 20, 2012 at 7:18 pm J. Priem, D. Taraborelli, P. Groth, C. Neylon (2010), Alt-metrics: A manifesto, (v.1.0), 26 October …*
By Metrics Remixed: The Times They Are a Webby | InTechWeb Blog on February 22, 2012 at 9:58 am dataset has moved to an online repository, and now, we can track it,” it is written in Altmetrics Manifesto. “Altmetrics are fast, using public APIs to gather data in days or weeks. They’re*
By BMJ Group blogs: BMJ Web Development Blog » Blog Archive » Total-impact: tool for researchers combines traditional andalternative metrics
on February 24, 2012 at 12:50 pm rely on filters to select the most relevant and significant sources from the rest,” the altmetrics manifesto argues. “Unfortunately, scholarship’s three main filters for importanceare
*
By Twitter y los blogs incrementan la visibilidad de los artículos científicos « Primer cuartil (Q1) on February 28, 2012 at 9:40 am investigación que va a producir abundante literatura en los próximos meses dentro de la llamada altmetrics. El trabajo no entra a valorar otra serie de cuestiones como el número de seguidores de las*
By Resistance Emerging to Sci Tech Publishing Status Quo : BeyondSearch
on March 6, 2012 at 5:07 am and ask the entire world for help, or talk about their research plans and get critiqued. Meanwhile, altmetrics are being generated in real time to assess the validity of data, and scientists peer reviewon
*
By Preguntas de la sesión “Medir en la web social: estrategias demárketing”. «
on
March 6, 2012 at 6:56 pm a bibliotecas con la bibliometría y los medios sociales, y por otro lado, con la Altmetrics, http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/ , aunque en este caso se refiera a la producción científica, a la ciencia, sin embargo tiene en*
By Academia vs. FOSS: The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly « Digifesto on March 8, 2012 at 6:44 am are used, they are often implicit ones extractable from the code repository itself, like Ohloh. Altmetrics are a solution to this*
By Proposal | related-work.net blog on March 12, 2012 at 3:52 am http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/ as an emerging trend from the web-science trust community. Their goal is to revolutionize the review process and create better filters for scientific publications making use of link structures and public discussions. (Might be interestingfor us).
*
By Related-work.net – Product Requirement Document released! on March 12, 2012 at 10:27 am http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/ as an emerging trend from the web-science trust community. Their goal is to revolutionize the review process and create better filters for scientific publications making use of link structures and public discussions. (Might be interestingfor us).
*
By Papers aren’t just for people | Mendeley Blog on March 14, 2012 at 11:39 pm the manufacturing plants of the industrial revolution, both grant funders and researchers want this revolution to happen. So why isn’t it happening? It’s happening because long ago we signed away*
By Beyond the PDF: Experiments in Open-Access Scholarly Publishing (#MLA13 CFP) | The Lapland Chronicles on March 15, 2012 at 2:51 am of open peer review, community-based publication, socially networked reader/writing strategies, altmetrical analytics, and open-source publishing platforms, particularly as they inform orrelate to
*
By Quora
on March 15, 2012 at 11:04 pm WHAT WOULD HAPPEN TO SCIENCE IF ELSEVIER WENT DOWN?… It’s not so much Elsevier’s efficiency that’s at question, but their sustainability. They’ve been able to reap huge profits from academic libraries, but academic library budgets are doing the opposite of going up, so I agree the effects will be neg…*
By “Looking-glass upon the wall, Who is fairest of us all?” (Part 3) « The Citation Culture on March 29, 2012 at 10:01 am one of the best representatives of this body of work is the Altmetrics Manifesto (Priem, Taraborelli, Groth, & Neylon, 2010). The manifesto notes that traditional forms of*
By Altmetrics – Alternative Metrics for Articles (think: impact 2.0) Kresge Physical Sciences Library on March 30, 2012 at 12:18 pm “Altmetrics: A Manifesto.” (http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/) (Viewed March 30, 2012)*
By The Future of Metrics in Science | DCXL on April 6, 2012 at 3:01 pm a graduate student at UNC’s School of Information and Library Science, coined the term “altmetrics” rather recently, and the idea has taken off like wildfire. altmetrics is the creation and*
By Comments on Tom Scheinfeldt’s “Invisible College: ThatCamp as Scholarly Society” | Chris Alen Sula on April 7, 2012 at 7:36 pm patterns are much more varied and diffuse than co-authorship. By incorporating measures such as altmetrics (e.g., downloads, mentions, favorites, shares, like) and social connections between humanists,*
By “Looking-glass upon the wall, Who is fairest of us all?” (Part 4) « The Citation Culture on April 12, 2012 at 8:06 am be able to monitor “in real time” how a publication reverbates in the communication system. The Altmetrics Manifesto (Priem, Taraborelli, Groth, & Neylon, 2010) even advocates the use of“real-time
*
By The Printing Press of the Digital Environment: A Conversation with Stanford’s Highwire Press - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of HigherEducation
on April 17, 2012 at 2:19 pm Because we are a publishing support service and not a publisher, we aren’t involved in the selection process for vetting what actually gets published. What we do suggest, however, is that scholars can put pressure on publishers to offer them access to their “value analytics.” While the number of citations an article gets is usually held up as the gold standard for determining its “impact,” particularly in the sciences, increasing numbers of people are getting interested in alternative forms of measuring impact, also known as “altmetrics.”*
By Forum Nowej Nauki (dzień pierwszy) - historiaimedia.org on April 18, 2012 at 11:37 pm blogosferą naukową czy nowymi trendami w mierzeniu i ocenianiu aktywności naukowej w Sieci (altmetrics). Być może to dobre wprowadzenie do konkretnych szkoleń, które CITTRU organizujeprzecież w
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By Post-Publication Peer Review: What Value Do Usage-Based Metrics Offer? « The Scholarly Kitchen on April 19, 2012 at 9:31 am leaves the search for new metrics (“altmetrics“) as perhaps the greatest hope for near-term improvement in our post-publication*
By Defining new metrics for journalism | Andrew Spittleon April 28, 2012
at 3:57 pm
Altmetrics.org was mentioned as one different approach. As their site says: Altmetrics expand our view of what impact looks like, but also of what’s making the impact.*
By How Elsevier can save itself, part 3: Hard « Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week #AcademicSpring on May 2, 2012 at 8:30 am danger is all the more real because of the rise of Altmetrics. A few years back when arXiv was establishing itself, journal impact factor was about the only*
By jodischneider.com/blog » Commercial Altmetric Explorer aimed atpublishers
on May 7, 2012 at 9:18 am is hitting its stride: 30 months after the Altmetrics manifesto1, there are 6 tools listed. This is great*
By New ways to evaluate scientists « Science 2.0 study on May 14, 2012 at 2:40 pm Altmetrics, a service which maps the reputation of scientists by monitoring how people use their papers on*
By How academics make their own job market even harder. | StatisticalEpidemiology
on May 25, 2012 at 8:20 am these apply to you, then you likely have an opportunity to help academia rise above publication-based metrics of academic impact, even if just an inch at a*
By Two Architects of Library Discovery Tools Launch an Altmetrics Venture — The Digital Shift on May 31, 2012 at 4:27 pm who wrote an altmetrics manifesto and recently co-authored a paper on altmetrics to be presented at the 17th InternationalConference
*
By Mendeley 機関版ワークショップ「Mendeley: 研究活動の新しい基準と図書館の役割」参加レポート @keitabando's Blog on June 2, 2012 at 6:54 am さらに踏み込むと、そうした様々なデジタルツールが研究分野で利用された結果、文献個々の評価(インパクト)をリアルタイムに計測出来るのでは、という流れにも発展し、altmetrics という概念が生み出されていくワケですが、これについては僕自身最も関心ある分野のひとつで、自身プレゼンテーションにも無理矢理関連付けて触れたワケですが、Tim Berners-Lee が同僚との間で論文を手軽に共有するためにWorld Wide Web
を開発した1990年12月以来20年が経過した今、ソーシャルメディアの台頭・普及により、ようやくウェブが科学に変革をもたらす時が来た、というのがこの分野で頻繁に使われる文句となってきた気がします(これとかこれとかこれ)。*
By How to Measure the Impact of Scholarship « Carolynthelib's Blog on June 8, 2012 at 2:46 pm Altmetrics – tracking system that attempts to note not just the electronic article usage in digital forms like Twitter or CiteULike, but also other information resources like datasets or blogs. This is tough to tackle but the various tools below are starting to develop some interesting methodologies*
By Mendeley will have an impact on the library. Workshop presentation: Mendeley Institutional Edition « @keitabando on June 15, 2012 at 3:53 amAltmetrics
に強い興味があってこれらの情報を日々ウォッチ。*
By June 2012
on June 15, 2012 at 12:14 pm Altmetrics Manifesto “No one can read everything. We rely on filters to make sense of the scholarly literature, but the narrow, traditional filters are being swamped. However, the growth of new, online scholarly tools allows us to make new filters; these altmetrics reflect the broad, rapid impact of scholarship in this burgeoning ecosystem. We call for more tools and research based on altmetrics.”*
By University of Pittsburgh First Adopter of Plum Analytics for Research Output — The Digital Shift on June 19, 2012 at 9:05 pm metrics that could reliably estimate the impact of an author’s research. The emerging field of altmetrics seeks to change that*
By Open Access for Open Knowledge: An Interview with Keita Bando |Australian Science
on June 20, 2012 at 12:19 am my opinion, altmetrics is the key to innovate OA relations. PLoS is the most important contribute to altmetrics*
By Open Access for Open Knowledge: I was interviewed by @danicar, the Editor in Chief of @AuScience « @keitabandoon
June 20, 2012 at 10:33 am my opinion, altmetrics is the key to innovate OA relations. PLoS is the most important contribute to altmetrics*
By Impact Factor Boxing 2012 « O'Really?on June 29, 2012
at 6:29 am
was the Finch report on Open Access. And if that wasn’t enough fun, there’s been the Altmetrics movement gathering pace , alongside a hint that the impact factor may be losing its grip on the*
By The Future Article | Reading eBooks in London on July 2, 2012 at 8:47 pm Taylor brought up new measures for impact, like altmetrics that look at weblinks, mass media, tweets and usage counts. But do academic publishers look at this*
By Video Tip of the Week: ScienceSeeker for science blogging | The OpenHelix Blog on July 11, 2012 at1:31 pm
infrastructure to recognize the value of outreach in non-traditional publications such as blogging. Altmetrics are being gathered and used as further ways to measure impact of researcher’soutput and
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By David Worlock | Developing digital strategies for the information marketplace | Supporting the migration of information providers and content players into the networked services world of the future.on
July 22, 2012 at 6:29 pm vision is summarized in: J. Priem, D. Taraborelli, P. Groth, C. Neylon (2010), Altmetrics: A manifesto, (v.1.0), 26 October 2010. http://altmetrics.org/manifesto“ These scholars plainly see as*
By Altmetrics – Trying to Fill the Gap « The Scholarly Kitchen on July 25, 2012 at 11:16 am of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, who coined the term “altmetrics.” In his post, “Altmetrics: a Manifesto,” Jason noted the limitations and slowness of peer review and citations. Hesuggests that the
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By Social Analytics for Institutional Twitter Accounts Provided by the 24 Russell Group Universities « UK Web Focus on August 3, 2012 at 3:21 pm analysing personal influence, and the approaches they use may be of interest to those involved in alt.metrics work. As described in a paper on Altmetrics in the Wild: Using Social Media to ExploreScholarly
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By Visualization of Research #dtk43 #dtk43_10 #Mendeley #Altmetrics «@KeitaBando
on August
12, 2012 at 7:46 am
scholarship. Their vision is summarized in: J. Priem, D. Taraborelli, P. Groth, C. Neylon (2010), Altmetrics: A manifesto, (v.1.0), 26 October 2010. http://altmetrics.org/manifesto via about–
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By On “New Forms of Scholarly Communication” | Shreds and Patches on August 15, 2012 at 1:48 pm altmetrics movement. If this conversation is not yet on your radar, I recommend beginning with the Altmetrics Manifesto. Beyond the old ideal of engaging our colleagues work closely, I am not endorsingany one approach,
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By Si Febvre et Bloch s’étaient souciés de leur RG Score, ils n’auraient pas fondé l’école des Annales | Frédéric Clavert on August 21, 2012 at 8:56pm
Ainsi, grâce (à cause de?) Research Gate (ou Mendeley, ou Academia.edu …) vous pourrez travailler sur votre réputation en ligne, améliorer votre index de citation. Cette tendance va de pair avec l’apparition des “altmetrics“.*
By Nuove metriche per misurare l’ impatto del giornalismo | LSDI on August 24, 2012 at 7:56 am a tentare di formulare sistemi di più ampio respiro per la misurazione dell’ impatto, come Altmetrics o le article-level metrics adottate dalla Public Library of Science. Entrambi combinanouna
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By ‘Altmetrics’: quality of engagement matters as much as retweets| Education News
on August 24, 2012 at 9:31 pm many of the new areas of study – from statistical cybermetrics to the increasingly popular altmetrics – focus on how links sharedaffect
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By Impact of blogging and social media on article downloads « CarloIerna's Blog
on August 28, 2012 at 2:34 pm good metric for the quality of the work is doubtful, nevertheless I cannot ignore that metrics and alt-metrics are (rightly or wrongly) used to assess researchers. I’m happy to see that blogsand social media
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By Get visible or vanish « phd with kids on September 4, 2012 at 4:47 am Lamp got up then and spoke about altmetrics, about finding ratings that make you sound good and unashamedly using them, aboutgetting work out
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By Preguntas de la sesión “¿Cómo medimos nuestras acciones en la web social?”. – SocialBiblio. Comunidad de práctica.on September 5,
2012 at 5:55 pm
a bibliotecas con la bibliometría y los medios sociales, y por otro lado, con la Altmetrics, http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/ , aunque en este caso se refiera a la producción científica, a la ciencia, sin embargo tiene en*
By Altmetrics por todas partes « Primer cuartil (Q1)on
September 9, 2012 at 7:43 pm fortuna en un escaso margen de tiempo. En apenas unos meses, desde que se acuñara el término Altmetrics han surgido empresas (Altmetric, Plum Analytics), proyectos (total-impact), y todo tipo depapers
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By Open access – is the UK leading the way? « Be openly accessibleor be obscure
on September 23, 2012 at 3:04 pm impact of the article itself, not its venue, that needs to be assessed. Alternative metrics (‘altmetrics‘) are under*
By Altmetrics | Biblioteksbloggenon September
25, 2012 at 12:45 pm Läs mer om Altmetrics på deras hemsida och varför inte testa din impact via altmetrics.*
By What Can Web Accessibility Metrics Learn From Alt.Metrics? « UKWeb Focus
on September 25, 2012 at 2:03 pm metrics for online reputation (i.e. services such as Klout) and assessment of research impact (e.g. alt.metrics); in both of these areas the potential benefits of metrics have been identified, buttheir
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By BMJ Group blogs: BMJ Web Development Blog » Blog Archive » Plum Analytics: a new player in the field of altmetrics? on September 28, 2012 at 2:43 pm the application and have just launched ImpactStory (more on that next week). Priem, who wrote the altmetrics manifesto, welcomed the appearance of Plum Analytics. “Looks to me like they’d be prettydirect
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By Social media = academic impact « another rambler on September 29, 2012 at 12:20 pm in content is illuminating in highlighting the problems of using social media to judge impact. Altmetrics needs to move yet further away from measuring numbers of interaction to the content and agentsof
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By iridium – reporting on identification of available external and internal tools RDM tools « iridium on October 3, 2012 at 9:18 amaltmetrics
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By The Infinite Tweeters Theory | The Great Green Birds on October 3, 2012 at 12:59 pm remember that ‘conversations in corridors’ will still take place. Despite the rise of altmetrics and the increasingly advanced analysis of online data on articles and citations, no algorithms can*
By British Library Data Citation on October 29, 2012 at9:21 am
the need to incorporate other, less traditional, measures of esteem. One view is expressed at altmetrics.org. It is not for us to say whether they are right or wrong but it is important both tounderstand how
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By More Caught My Eye | Against-the-Grain.comon
October 29, 2012 at 12:52 pm a recent public talk and workshop led by Jason Priem, a co-author of the “well-regarded AltMetrics Manifesto” and a founder of the Web tool called ImpactStory. While Mr. Priem gaveample attention to
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By What is open about Open Science? Definitions and debate on October 29, 2012 at 4:35 pm may change as new, more open measurements of scholarly impact become more mainstream. Measuring and evaluating the impact and quality of publicly-funded research*
By moving beyond the low-hanging #altmetrics fruit « justin's longishnotes
on October 30, 2012 at 11:27 pm are the #altmetrics that I want to see for individual research*
By ReRank.it | rerankon November 3,
2012 at 9:09 pm
ranking is based on data provided by the ImpactStory API. ImpactStory aggregates altmetrics: diverse impacts from your articles, datasets, blog posts, and more. The source code for ReRank can*
By ReRank.it | What is it? on November 3,2012 at 9:20 pm
ranking is based on data provided by the ImpactStory API. ImpactStory aggregates altmetrics: diverse impacts from your articles, datasets, blog posts, and more. The source code for ReRank can*
By Inside BioMed Central at the 3rd Open Access Africa conference - Research to Action - Research to Action on November 6, 2012 at 1:51 pm of journals, there is an emerging recognition that there are other tools available. For example, altmetrics tracks how an article is shared and saved in the social media world. A new BioMed Centralarticle
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By SpotOn London 2012: Altmetrics everywhere – but what are we missing? #solo12impact | SpotOn on November 7, 2012 at 3:15 pm J. Priem, D. Taraborelli, P. Groth, C. Neylon (2010), Altmetrics: A manifesto*
By Understanding the Limits of Altmetrics: Slideshare Statistics « UKWeb Focus
on November 8, 2012 at 3:26 pm be more relevant to today’s fat-moving digital environment, which are know as altmetrics. The altmetrics manifesto explains*
By Inundata – PLOS Altmetrics workshopon November
8, 2012 at 11:49 pm
still not be such a good indicator of real impact. A recent news piece in Science as well as the original manifesto written by Jason, Paul, and Dario is also worth reading. Pedro Beltrao also posted asummary of the
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By NIF Blog » Blog Archive » A Call to Science Bloggers on November 9, 2012 at 2:16 pm it provides additional avenues to calculate impact metrics – similar to those observed by AltMetrics.org and*
By Charleston 2012: bX Usage-Based Services « eclectic librarian on November 11, 2012 at 2:11 am Atmetrics – probably will be incorporated to enhance the recommender service.*
By SpotOn London 2012: Altmetrics beyond the Numbers | SpotOn on November 13, 2012 at 11:06 am citations and usage statistics. The PLOS Article-Level Metrics project was started in 2008. Thealtmetrics manifesto was published in October 2010 and described the fundamental ideas. By October 2011 we had a number*
By Before the Gate: the open way forward in the humanities | tjm.org on November 13, 2012 at 9:10 pm Altmetrics movement, helping to open a space for HSS academics to articulate unique values and practices that*
By Altmetrics — Replacing the Impact Factor Is Not the Only Point « The Scholarly Kitchen on November 14, 2012 at 9:31 am as a container is an important value metric and one that needs to continue, the rapidly evolving alternative metrics (altmetrics) movement is concerned with more than replacing traditional journalassessment
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By Research should be produced, not just published - The Ubiquitous Librarian - The Chronicle of Higher Education on November 17, 2012 at 5:53 pm Now the sad thing is that a tenure committees probably would not factor this in, but imagine being able to put something in your review packet that says: I did this experiment, wrote a paper, and over one million people learned about my research. Talk about alt metrics…*
By Communicating your research online? ImpactStory tells you how well you’re doing. | Connected Researchers on November 17, 2012 at 10:17pm
ImpactStory was developed by two specialists in metrics of academic research. Heather Piwowar a postdoctoral fellow at Duke University and the University of British Columbia studying ”research data availability and data reuse“. And Jason Priem, PhD student in information science at University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. Jason is credited for putting term altmetrics out there and an author of the altmetricmanifesto.
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By Thing 20: Blog, tweet or post a link | 23 Things for Researchon November 19,
2012 at 7:30 am
article, and they may be taken into consideration when making hiring or tenure decisions. The altmetrics manifesto argues that new forms of scholarly and popular communication (e.g. social media)require a rethink
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By #oped12 «…Sulle spalle di giganti» « serenaturri's Blog on November 19, 2012 at 5:02 pm fonte immagine: altmetrics*
By Notes from the “Current/Future State of Higher Education” Educause Live Webinar held today on November 20, 2012 at 7:14 pm altmetrics.org/manifesto*
By Metrics and Beyond @ SpotOn London 2012 | Altmetric.comon
November 21, 2012 at 11:11 pm For the first time ever, there was an entire session devoted entirely to a discussion about the bourgeoning field. The session, called “Altmetrics beyond the numbers”, was run by Sarah Venis(Medicins sans
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By Interview with Dr. Victor Henning, Mendeley | QuestioScientia.com on November 23, 2012 at 9:28 pm by my thesis advisors, they were cited by Dr. Henning – we’re simply working a lot about alt-metrics at the*
By Dr. Victor Henning – Co-Founder & CEO, Mendeley Ltd. 来日講演2012(福岡編) « @KeitaBandoon November 26,
2012 at 3:38 am
この辺りは最近話題となりつつあるaltmetrics(ソーシャルメディアを活用した研究評価指標)とも絡んでいて、とてもムラムラする箇所です。 Mendeleyはaltmetricsに欠かせない(altmetricsにとってもMendeleyは欠かせない)存在になりつつあること再認識。 Mendeley人気に拍車がかかれば、必然的にaltmetricsに注目が集まる・・来年のSPARC Japanセミナーあたりではきっとaltmetricsをテーマとしたセミナーが開催され、第一人者のJasonあたりが来日して・・そんなことを妄想しながら聴き入りました。*
By Dr. Victor Henning – Co-Founder & CEO, Mendeley Ltd. 来日講演2012(横浜編) « @KeitaBandoon November 27,
2012 at 2:30 am
「図書館員は、インパクト評価に関する研究者の知識と関心を支える重要な立場にある」 最近、altmetrics(オルトメトリクス)と呼ばれる新たな研究評価指数が注目を浴び初めています。altmetricsは、ソーシャルメディアを活用して研究成果の影響度を「論文レベル」でリアルタイムに測定し、伝統的な研究評価指標を補完することが期待されています。 今日これからVictorが紹介されるMendeley機関版は、機関内での学術情報がどの様に流通しているのかを俯瞰し視覚化してくれる点が最大の特徴であり魅力だと思います。この根底にはaltmetricsの概念があり、これは今後とても重要視されるだろう、特に図書館員にとっては・・冒頭の引用には、そんな意味が込められているのではと思います。*
By Open Access 2012 Utrecht « Mediatheekfcj’s Blog on November 28, 2012 at 10:43 am Library. Traditional metrics are limited. Is peer review ‘broken’? The Alt Metrics Manifesto http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/ gives solutions to the current problems. Some of the online tools mentioned by Bianca Kramer*
By LSE Future of Academic Impact Conference | Strategist.ie on December 4, 2012 at 1:09 pm http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By Mendeley group: All papers discussed in our journalclub to be found on one single site | Causality on December 6, 2012 at 7:32 am have the opportunity to see use data from users around the world to use in the development of alt.metrics. Mendeley was chosen for this blog for it is targeted at working in teams: now only authors of the*
By ChemSpider Blog » Blog Archive » Rewards and Recognition for the Authors of ChemSpider SyntheticPages on December 11, 2012 at 5:59 pm systems that can contribute to Alternative Metrics – Already people are developing platforms, such as Impact Story. CSSP presentsthe perfect
*
By How often is your work mentioned in social media sites? | Researcher@Library Blog on December 12, 2012 at 4:11 am info on Altmetrics for Scopus and the Altmetric manifesto. This entry was posted in Bibliometrics, Citation metrics, Publishing and tagged Bibliometrics,*
By ciência na web 2.0: divulgar, registrar e indexar « ciência namídia
on December 15, 2012 at 5:01 pm Altmetrics: a manifesto;*
By Infobib » Altmetrics in VuFindon December
18, 2012 at 1:13 pm
wer nicht weiß, was das alles soll: hier geht es zum Altmetrics-Manifesto. Die Konfiguration lautet: class=’altmetric-embed’*
By Research, bibliometrics and Bradford’s Law « Wetwiring on December 27, 2012 at 3:47 pm Reuters’s InCites, though of course there are alternative approaches being developed, such as AltMetrics. The question I wish to ask is whether Bradford’s Law is any longer sufficient in a worldof
*
By Come misurare l’ impatto del giornalismo? | LSDIon
January 4, 2013 at 7:55 am ha portato alla formulazione di metriche di più ampio respiro, che includevano anche il web, come Altmetrics o i criteri di misurazione della Public Library of Science, che combinano una seriedi dati, tra
*
By From card catalogs to computers: databases in vertebrate paleontology - Ross Mounce on January 12, 2013 at 6:20 pm of citing data in countable ways or Data Citation isn’t explicitly mentioned once. Nor altmetrics for that*
By A monitoring and evaluation activity for all think tanks: ask what explains your reach | on think tanks on January 14, 2013 at 6:01 am this again has a lesson, and it is one that will become increasingly important to take on board as AltMetrics become more important to judging academic success. The issue is what makes up afigure – the 113
*
By How To Bring Academics to the Social-Media Party? Indirectly | TimMcCormick
on January 14, 2013 at 6:13 pm metrics expert and “altmetrics” leader, Jason Priem, explored and quantitatively estimated scholarly Twitter use in his Nov*
By Open Science Summit Addresses The Future Of Research « on January 15, 2013 at 8:01 am author, commenter, or reviewer), the diversification of journal impact factor into a multitude of altmetrics (new filters for quantifying and understanding scholarly contributions), andespecially, the
*
By Version 4 upgrade: Altmetrics (tracking the impact of new journal publications) embeddable in Library OneSearch « Library OneSearch@NTU on January 22, 2013 at 5:24 pm upgraded version 4 of Library OneSearch supports the inclusion of an Altmetrics plug-in for LOS developed by Ex*
By Inundata – Altmetrics as a discovery toolon
January 24, 2013 at 12:10 am Altmetrics is all the rage these days in the scientometrics world. One rationale for developing these metrics*
By Altmetrics - A manifesto for better information filtering. on February 6, 2013 at 1:51 pm to this interesting post from Altmetrics.org, conventional scholarly content filtering using Peer-Review, Citation and the*
By Mendeley – vakliteratuur 2.0 « wetenschapper20 on February 7, 2013 at 10:03 am biedt Mendeley een vorm van Altmetrics: een manier om de impact van een artikel op een andere manier te bepalen dan via traditionele*
By PeerJ – the science journal we need and deserve ←Test Blog
on February 14, 2013 at 12:12 am innovate on everything about the publishing process, from open peer review, to the integration of altmetrics, to the simple idea of publishing articles as they come in (like a blog) rather than inseparate
*
By #OAI8, the 8th Workshop on Innovations in Scholarly Communication will be held in Geneva, Switzerland, from 19th to 21st June 2013. « @KeitaBando on February 21,2013 at 8:40 am
new friends! Of course, hanging up is not the only purpose. OAI8 features some sessions about altmetrics, which I am particularly interested in, makes me looking forward*
By ALIA Information Online 2013 | Library Staff Training Reports on February 22, 2013 at 4:12 am normalized down). Pat also provided a good introduction to alternative metrics or alt-metrics (this is another good introduction) and the alt-metrics bookmarklet, which providesarticle level
*
By ACM Web Science Conference concludes - Web Science Truston
February 25, 2013 at 9:22 am demanding shorter slots. Three workshops on the Web Science Curriculum, Health Web Science and Altmetrics, preceded the conference as a whole, and a lively poster session demonstrated notonly how many
*
By First medical writer’s congress in the GCC gives authors the inside scoop on scientific publishing | qscience.the blog on February 25, 2013 at 11:58 am a publishing world where open access, altmetrics and great shifts in technology related to internet search engines are availing way more visibility,*
By DREaM workshop two. (Part three of five events.) | Intermittentnotes
on February 25, 2013 at 1:31 pm also drew attention to ‘altmetrics’, an attempt to devise and use alternative means by which to recognise academic output. By*
By Thoughts on Tools of Change | Musings and Marvels on March 1, 2013 at 5:47 am Altmetrics is still in early days, Carpenter said. It’s a valuable system that focuses not just on the journal, but also on the researcher who contributed. To find out more, visit altmetrics.org.*
By Will changing how science is measured change what science produces?| Bouncing Ideas
on March 2, 2013 at 4:18 pm is a “manifesto” outlining the details behind altmetrics which discusses the bottle necks currently occurring in the status quoof peer
*
By Disruptive Tools for Research and Publication | SLA Silicon Valley on March 6, 2013 at 5:39pm
measuring method. Due to the lag time required to publish, citation counts can take years to form. altmetrics take note of mentions in social media, such as tweeting and re-tweeting in twitter,blog mentions,
*
By The revelations of research, and altmetrics | joesart.org on March 11, 2013 at 2:42 pm altmetrics was the most significant thing Matthew pointed me toward, a movement started a couple of years ago. Their work hinges around a manifesto, and broadly speaking this movement encompasses all of what I’ve been thinking about. The very fact they’ve termed it a manifesto is indicative of the size of the problem. They couldn’t just write a normal paper, the altmetrics people, and I, are both hinting that a wholesale change is necessary to resolve the engrained issues in the way academic literature is handled (and some associated problems). While it’s always reassuring to find somebody has had the same kind of thoughts as yourself, it’s also daunting and worrying to understand quite how large the scale of the issue is. Going down the altmetrics rabbit hole, there is no sigh of the depth abating. There’s a lot of stuff down there, mostly juicy, the occasional dropping. The occasional juicy dropping.*
By Publishers Opposing Federally Mandated Public Access to Research Outputs | InfoEdge - Reading the industry so you don't have to on March 12, 2013 at 7:10 pm traditional publication models seem bleak. A few weeks ago, I did a short blog post on the topic of altmetrics, which aims to provide new mechanisms of measuring an individual output’s impactand
*
By Science Online NYC (SoNYC) – Setting the Research Record Straight: Recap | SpotOn on March 14, 2013 at 3:33 pm can pre-publish manuscripts and data to receive feedback from the scientific community and Altmetrics, which is attempting to redefine the traditional impact factor by considering other types of*
By New metrics need fresh data | Think Links on March 15, 2013 at 3:52 pm of the ideas in the altmetrics manifesto was that almetrics allow a diversity of metrics. With colleagues in the VU University*
By New metrics need fresh data - Knowledge Representation andReasoning Group
on March
16, 2013 at 12:21 pm of the ideas in the altmetrics manifesto was that almetrics allow a diversity of metrics. With colleagues in the VU University*
By tramullas.com | En el IV Seminario EC3 sobre Altmetrics y Unidades de Bibliometría | tramullas.com on March 19, 2013 at 11:37 am con otros recursos. En esta mesa se analizaron diferentes herramientas e indicadores usando Altmetrics, señalando su potencial y su futuros desarrollos, pero también sus limitaciones ydebilidades,
*
By Video Tip of the Week: figshare + GenoCAD = outreach | The OpenHelix Blog on March 20, 2013at 1:13 pm
for their output that may be outside of the traditional publication system, alternative metrics or altmetics are being developed to serve that. Figshare can let you assess how many people have seen your items,*
By TUHH Universitätsbibliothek: Zur Zukunft des Publizierens on April 3, 2013 at 5:31 am zum Impact-Faktor von Zeitschriften oder auch zum Hirsch-Index eines Autors wie zum Beispiel “Altmetrics” und andere Verfahren zur Wirkung, zum Impact von*
By Altmetrics | Forskningsrelateraton April 4,
2013 at 1:22 pm
Läs mer om Altmetrics på deras hemsida och varför inte testa din impact via ImpactStory.*
By New features to help follow and filter your interests, on F1000Prime | Naturally Selected on April 8, 2013 at 3:18 pm in some cases, provide information on research impact not based on the Impact Factor. Amongst these alternative or article-level metrics tools is F1000Prime. F1000Prime adds expert commentary and context to the raw numbers – social*
By Elsevier (giant for-profit scholarly publisher) buys Mendeley (free citation ... - Scientific American (blog) - Ag2 Literary Agency on April 10, 2013 at 4:28 am and users can pay for additional storage space or more collaboration features. Mendeley embraced alternative metrics, a hallmark of open access publications like PLOS ONE. Mendeley released an incredibly useful Open*
By Altmetrics and Digital Impact | FSU Digital Scholars on April 16, 2013 at 1:42 pm http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By Nature is not a Book » Is it already time for alt-alt-metrics? on April 17, 2013 at 2:12 pm solution to both problems is a system of “alternative metrics” (altmetrics) of scholarly influence that seeks to replace or amend the established standards of peer review,*
By Research Data Management and Services — recap with links (Ted Baldwin and Linda Newman) | UC Libraries Digital Learning Community on April 17, 2013 at 6:13 pm Piwowar spoke on ImpactStory, an open source tool that utilizes altmetrics to describe the broader “impact flavor” and re-use of research data and other*
By Infobib » Plum Analytics (PlumX)on April 19,
2013 at 12:24 pm
Research Impact” auf die Fahne. Es handelt sich also um ein YAAP (Yet Another Altmetrics Project), hinter dem mit Andrea Michalek und Mike Buschman zwei Primo-Köpfe*
By Altmetrics: Alternate Ways to Assess the Impact of Your Research |Academic Technology
on April 19, 2013 at 9:26 pm From Altmetrics: A Manifesto:*
By TUHH Library: The future of publishing on April 30, 2013 at 7:14 am zum Impact-Faktor von Zeitschriften oder auch zum Hirsch-Index eines Autors wie zum Beispiel “Altmetrics” und andere Verfahren zur Wirkung, zum Impact von*
By The next era of scholarly publication | Next stop: Science on April 30, 2013 at 11:24 am have in more unreviewed formats like blog posts or pre-print repositories. Alternative metrics (altmetrics) are a big factor in this reliability, as high volume of traffic, downloads and online*
By All That Glitters is Not Gold: The Fallacy of Open Access Evangelism | Adam G. Dunn on May 5, 2013 at 5:09 am better ways to attribute and praise individuals for discrete chunks of research. This is where altmetrics are expected to extend citation-based metrics to detail the full range of impact thatresearch (not
*
By A critical view of altmetrics | Konrad Hinsen's Blog on May 8, 2013 at 2:28 pm Altmetrics is one of the hotly debated topics in the Open Science movement today. In summary, the idea is that traditional bibliometric measures (citation counts, impact factors, h factors, …) are too limited because they miss all the scientific activity that happens outside of the traditional journals. That includes the production of scientific contributions that are not traditional papers (i.e. datasets, software, blog posts, etc.) and the references to scientific contributions that are not in the citation list of a traditional paper (blogs, social networks, etc.). Note that the altmetrics manifesto describes altmetrics as a tool to help find scientists publications worth reading. I find it hard to believe that its authors have not thought of applications in evaluation of researchers and institutions, which will inevitably happen if altmetrics ever takes off.*
By Bring your own identity | Amber at Warwick: academic technologyon May 12, 2013
at 9:44 pm
The signs are good that ORCID will take off. I hope so, particularly so that innovative third party services can come in and offer new approaches. I am a big fan of the idea of impact story, a beta service that uses ORCID to drive a whole digital footprint approach to tracing the web metrics and social shares of academic online outputs, alongside citations. This broadened attention is fundamental to the altmetrics manifesto.*
By Impact Story | Sexy Statisticson May
13, 2013 at 4:27 pm
aggregates altmetrics: diverse impacts from your articles, datasets, blog posts, and*
By Article-Level Metrics | librarythings@uow on May 14, 2013 at 3:32 am the way it draws together traditional metrics (terms like citation, impact factor or h-index) and altmetrics – at journal, personal and article level. Rather than presenting emerging datastreams like
*
By Vicki Chandler: The San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment | Living Biology on May 17, 2013 at 11:04 pm efforts to get at more sophisticated measures are already underway, including (to name just a few) Alternative Metrics for Science, Data Citation Principles, Improving Future Research Communication and e-Scholarship,*
By Just say no to impact factors | 1tourism.comon May 18, 2013
at 2:17 pm
be considered”, not just publications. One way to achieve this may be through greater use of altmetrics, which offer new insights into the impact of research. But even here we need to be conscious ofthe
*
By What is impact? | Naturally Selectedon May 20, 2013 at
12:52 pm
These usage measures are encapsulated in the growing ‘altmetrics’ landscape (for a summary see). F1000Prime recommendations, which provide a machine-readable star rating ofpapers along with a
*
By Altmetrics and open access – a measure of public interest | Australian Open Access Support Group on May 22, 2013 at 8:43 pm Altmetrics (or alternative metrics) was a term aptly coined in a tweet by Jason Priem (co-founder of ImpactStory). Altmetrics measure the number of times a research output gets cited, tweeted about, liked, shared, bookmarked, viewed, downloaded, mentioned, favourited, reviewed, or discussed. It harvests these numbers from a wide variety of open source web services that count such instances, including open access journal platforms, scholarly citation databases, web-based research sharing services, and social media.*
By Steering clear of the iceberg: three ways we can fix the data-credibilty crisis in science | TechDiem.com on May 25, 2013 at 12:32 pm research is based on journal prestige, but some scientists and startups are beginning to use alternative metrics in an effort to refocus on the science itself (rather than the publishing*
By The Challenges of Measuring Social Impact Using Altmetrics -Research Trends
on May 27, 2013 at 12:32 pm A good introduction to the ambitions of altmetrics may be found at altmetrics.org/manifesto (2) Thelwall, M., Haustein, S., Larivière, V., Sugimoto, C.R. (2013) “Do altmetrics work?*
By Links for the week 6-12th December | 40thieves' Infrequently Updated Blog on June 4, 2013at 9:29 pm
been looking into some altmetrics stuff recently (measuring and aggregating social commentary around academic articles) and I thought*
By Impact Factor’s flaws, in 200 words - sMemo on June 6, 2013 at 8:44 amAltmetrics.org
*
By New metrics need fresh data - Web & Mediaon June 6,
2013 at 9:35 am
of the ideas in the altmetrics manifesto was that almetrics allow a diversity of metrics. With colleagues in the VU University*
By Tech Roundup | LibraryTechTalkon June
7, 2013 at 8:46 pm
from a variety of sources and measure the impact that their scholarly output has had using altmetrics like “number of times bookmarked on CiteULike” or “number of readers in Mendeley”.*
By BYOI: ORCID and Impact Story | Amber at Warwick: academictechnology
on June 13, 2013 at 2:38 pm Altmetrics is a term that has come to mean the broadening of what we count as scholarship and how we value it. I would describe services like figshare, PeerJ and mendeley as cool social scholarship. What the ORCID ecosystem does is enable established currency to be brought alongside the newer social media currencies, and those cool social scholarship services therefore come into their own.Then layering across all of that, altmetrics-focussed services like impactstory and plum analytics.*
By Altmetrics: alternative modes for assessing scholarly impact | Learning at the Library on June 18, 2013 at 2:55 pm are numerous apps, websites, and tools working to provide this type of data. Altmetrics.org has a manifesto describing the terms of the terrain, but even more helpfully, they provide a tools linkcollecting
*
By Why a NISO effort to standardise AltMetrics? | Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week #AcademicSpring on June 22, 2013 at 12:24 pm As has now been widely reported, NISO have a $200K grant from the Alfred P Sloan Foundation to develop standards for AltMetrics.*
By Blogging and Tenure | lauren's library blogon
June 25, 2013 at 8:45 pm The obvious answer: it doesn’t count. But there is an emerging question: what is the role of altmetrics in*
By Legacy vs. Digital Models of Academic Scholarship | JustPublics@365 on June 28, 2013 at 2:51 am example, Jeff Jarvis (another CUNY colleague) has 123,667 Twitter followers. That’s a kind of “altmetric” – a measure of his reach and influence. Increasingly, book publishers, even someemployers,
*
By IWMW 2013 (1) | The shape of thingson
July 1, 2013 at 9:09 am Altmetrics manifesto: http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By Science metrics, LitRoost, and the networked era | The UnStudentBlog
on July 2, 2013 at 4:13 pm emergent alternative to traditional citations as an impact measure is altmetrics. By combining information about how often an article is downloaded, shared, blogged, cited,*
By Impact Factor Shifting from Journal to Article | JustPublics@365 on July 5, 2013 at 11:55 pm Lozano points out that impact factors were developed in the early 20th century to help American university libraries with their journal purchasing decisions. Of course, throughout the last century, printed, bound journals were the main way in which scholarly research was distributed. All that’s changing.*
By
図書館員は、研究者へのaltmetrics支援をいつやるか? 今でs(ry | @KeitaBando on July 6, 2013 at 11:00 am altmetricsは比較的新しい概念――altmetrics: a manifestoが初めて公開(v*
By #OAbooks in the HSS: Contexts, Conversations, Technologies and Communities of Practice | OPEN REFLECTIONS on July 8, 2013 at 2:40 pm to assessment that start to pop up. And what about alternative means for accounting impact such as altmetrics and online environments such as ImpactStory? There seems to be a sweep of possibilities if wehave
*
By journal impact factors: what are they good for? | orgtheory.net on July 9, 2013 at 9:26 pm There’s a heated debate going on about impact factors: their meaning, use and mis-use, etc. Science has an editorial discussing impact factor distortions. One academic association, the American Society for Cell Biology, has put together a declaration (with 8500+ signers so far)–San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA)–highlighting the problems caused by the abuse of journal impact factors and related measures. Problems with impact factors have in turn led to alternative metrics, for example see altmetrics.*
By Twitter per (web)editori scientifici | Prometeus - ANBI Magazine on July 12, 2013 at 9:27 am reale, la diffusione nel mondo accademico di articoli scientifici e non. Lo sostiene il manifesto Altmetrics, che misura l’impatto di pubblicazioni all’esterno del mondo accademico,ricerche
*
By Altmetrics: A Primer | SFOboundon
July 17, 2013 at 6:22 pm The altmetrics manifesto*
By The Pernicious Mission Creep of Ranking Academic Journals - on July 30, 2013 at 11:02 pm the misuse of these metrics. Some even suggest a more reliable ranking system, like altmetrics or the h-index to better suss out the value of an individual researchers or paper. Australia’s*
By Altmetrics: New Measures of Influence for the Web 2.0 Age - EI:UI - Environmental Information: Use and Influence on July 31, 2013 at 6:46 pm to be found in Jason Priem, Dario Taraborelli, Paul Groth, and Cameron Neylon’s (2010) “Altmetrics: a manifesto,” which proclaims that the entire peer-review process is “slow, encourages conventionality, and*
By Caldo e freddo polare – Ocasapiens - Blog - Repubblica.it on August 7, 2013 at 10:57 am Questa proposta di metriche alternative mi sembra un po’ più*
By ImpactStory: telling an alternative story around scholarly impact |librarythings@uow
on August 8, 2013 at 4:23 am is one of a range of products that makes use of Altmetrics data to tell a story about the impact of scholarly research. In an increasingly social online*
By Altmetrics and the Global South: Increasing research visibility - Research to Action - Research to Action on August 13, 2013 at 8:42 am theme is echoed by Cameron Nylon one of the co-producers of the Altmetrics Manifesto. Nylon tentatively points out that altmetrics have a greater role to play in Africa, as African*
By Altmetrics, Altmétricas, Altmetrías: nuevas perspectivas sobre la visibilidad y el impacto de la investigación científica | SciELO enPerspectiva
on August 14, 2013 at 5:58 pm 6. Altmetrics: a manifesto. Altmetrics. . Available from: http://altmetrics.org/manifesto*
By #ORCID Ambassador に就任しました | @KeitaBandoon August 16, 2013
at 12:25 am
MyOpenArchive
というプロジェクトを始めてオープンアクセスに興味を抱き(2007年)、ソーシャルメディアを活用した研究成果共有の可能性に思いを馳せてMendeley
を溺愛し(2010年)、学術コミュニケーションにおけるソーシャルメディア活用の可能性とその結果としての研究評価(インパクト)に関心が移って漂流した結果辿り着いた先は altmetrics(2011年)、な私の関心事。*
By Defining social media terms | Heidi Allen Digital Strategy on August 19, 2013 at 7:45 pm there is a new term which tries to capture online mentions of research articles called “altmetrics” originally defined by Jason Priem. Publishers such as Elsevier and PLoS are developing new*
By Professional Development – A belated ALA reporton
August 22, 2013 at 8:52 pm same, but with Highwire “under the hood.” The MUSE folks said they are also looking at almetrics and trying to find ways to measure the “impact” of humanities content. Project MUSE has*
By Research Without Borders Event 9/24: Social Media and the ResearchCycle
on August 30, 2013 at 3:20 pm research, and debate. As scholars increasingly move their work to the web, and with an estimated third of all scholars now active on Twitter, conversations that previously took place within campus walls are now open for the world to pitch*
By Defining social media reach, impact, and virality. on September 2, 2013 at 7:18 pm there is a new term which tries to capture online mentions of research articles called “altmetrics” originally defined by Jason Priem. Publishers such as Elsevier and PLoS are developing new*
By Dr. Victor Henning – Co-Founder & CEO, Mendeley Ltd. 来日講演2012(横浜編) | @KeitaBandoon
September 4, 2013 at 11:37 am 「図書館員は、インパクト評価に関する研究者の知識と関心を支える重要な立場にある」 最近、altmetrics(オルトメトリクス)と呼ばれる新たな研究評価指数が注目を浴び初めています。altmetricsは、ソーシャルメディアを活用して研究成果の影響度を「論文レベル」でリアルタイムに測定し、伝統的な研究評価指標を補完することが期待されています。 今日これからVictorが紹介されるMendeley機関版は、機関内での学術情報がどの様に流通しているのかを俯瞰し視覚化してくれる点が最大の特徴であり魅力だと思います。この根底にはaltmetricsの概念があり、これは今後とても重要視されるだろう、特に図書館員にとっては・・冒頭の引用には、そんな意味が込められているのではと思います。*
By Dr. Victor Henning – Co-Founder & CEO, Mendeley Ltd. 来日講演2012(福岡編) | @KeitaBandoon
September 4, 2013 at 11:47 am この辺りは最近話題となりつつあるaltmetrics(ソーシャルメディアを活用した研究評価指標)とも絡んでいて、とてもムラムラする箇所です。 Mendeleyはaltmetricsに欠かせない(altmetricsにとってもMendeleyは欠かせない)存在になりつつあること再認識。 Mendeley人気に拍車がかかれば、必然的にaltmetricsに注目が集まる・・来年のSPARC Japanセミナーあたりではきっとaltmetricsをテーマとしたセミナーが開催され、第一人者のJasonあたりが来日して・・そんなことを妄想しながら聴き入りました。*
By Visualization of Research #dtk43 #dtk43_10 #Mendeley #Altmetrics |@KeitaBando
on September 4, 2013 at 11:55 am scholarship. Their vision is summarized in: J. Priem, D. Taraborelli, P. Groth, C. Neylon (2010), Altmetrics: A manifesto, (v.1.0), 26 October 2010. http://altmetrics.org/manifesto via about–
*
By Mendeley will have an impact on the library. Workshop presentation: Mendeley Institutional Edition | @KeitaBando on September 4, 2013 at 12:12 pmAltmetrics
に強い興味があってこれらの情報を日々ウォッチ。*
By Is Altmetric for me | Hazman Labs, Incon September
7, 2013 at 12:07 am
is interesting when I start to hear about Altmetric from the website. Basically, altmetrics is the creation and study of new metrics based on the social web for*
By Some considerations regarding data-driven design | As I learn ... on September 9, 2013 at 7:38 pm http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/ http://www.wooga.com/2012/07/*
By A brief introduction to altmetrics for researchers - Research to Action - Research to Action on September 11, 2013 at 9:20 am The Altmetrics Manifesto http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By 査読はどうあるべきなのか - システム論ブログ -永井俊哉 on
September 12, 2013 at 7:50 am こうしたエリート主義には、問題もいろいろある。すなわち、参加者と評価者の数が少ないために、データが不足したり、評価基準が仲間内で固定されたり、工作活動に対して脆弱であったり といった弊害が生じる。こうした弊害を解消するために、ネット上での一般の人々の評価を反映させるオルトメトリクス(altmetrics)が提唱されている。オルトメトリクスとは、非伝統的な(alternative)評価指標(metrics)という意味である。具体的には、ソーシャルメディアでの評価、Mendeley などの学術論文引用管理ソフトウェアでの使用状況、ソーシャルブックマーク、オンライン上でのリンクなどのデータから研究者の業績を評価する。*
By The future of the peer-review systems - Systemics Blog - NagaiToshiya on
September 12, 2013 at 8:04 am peers, and vulnerability to manipulation. To prevent such harmful effects, some propose altmetrics, alternative metrics of academic works by means of the reputation of social media, storage at*
By Academics online: what are the risks? | This Sociological Life on September 16, 2013 at 6:53 am increasingly subjected to metric assessments based on their success in using social media (via altmetrics) and the reluctance of some to take up new activities in an already very demanding workinglife.
*
By More On Alternative Research Metrics: Telling The Full Story Of Researchers’ Productivity | Digital Media & Science on September 22, 2013 at 5:01 pm “Some people say, ‘I don’t care about popular science; I only care about quality science. The only measure we have is the consensus of the scientific community. One could call that popularity; one could call it expert consensus.”—Information scientist Jason Priem, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and author of altmetrics: a manifesto*
By My objectives as a Panton Fellow | OKF Open Science Working Group on September 24, 2013 at 2:29 pm data. Altmetrics are indicators of scholarly activity and impact on the web. Have a look at the altmetrics manifesto for a thorough*
By 坂東, 慶太.
「オープンアクセス×ソーシャルメディア」時代の研究評価指数altmetricsの可能性. 2013, 月刊DRF, 2013年10月号, No.45, p.1-4. #altmetrics #OAWeek |@KeitaBando on
October 1, 2013 at 8:19 am Priem, J.; Taraborelli, D.; Groth, P.; Neylon, C. altmetrics: a manifesto, (v.1.0). 2010-10-26. 坂東 慶太.Altmetricsの可能性
*
By Glorious Generalist: What Should Technology Librarians Be Doing About Alternative Metrics? on October 2, 2013 at 8:27 pm potentially makes the tools available to researchers more homogeneous and ignores niches. As the alt metrics manifesto suggests, the traditional “filters” in scholarly communication of peer review,*
By Lunchlezing Paul Groth: Telling your research story with metrics | Wilma van den Brink on October3, 2013 at 9:02 am
Groth is universitair docent bij de Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam. Hij is initiatiefnemer van het altmetrics manifesto. Paul heeft bovendien meegewerkt aan een korte film over sociale media en open access in 2012. Zie*
By My objectives as a Panton Fellow | Science and the Web on October 4, 2013 at 11:36 am data. Altmetrics are indicators of scholarly activity and impact on the web. Have a look at the altmetrics manifesto for a thorough*
By The Future of Metrics in Science | Data Pub on October 14, 2013 at 9:12 pm a graduate student at UNC’s School of Information and Library Science, coined the term “altmetrics” rather recently, and the idea has taken off like*
By Open Access: Redefining Impact | Florida Institute of Technology on October 16, 2013 at 12:00 pm ~ J. Priem, D. Taraborelli, P. Groth, & C. Neylon,altmetrics.org
*
By Defining social media terms | Heidi Allen on October 23, 2013 at 3:38 am there is a new term which tries to capture online mentions of research articles called “altmetrics” originally defined by Jason Priem. Publishers such as Elsevier and PLoS are developing new*
By La quantité est-elle la nouvelle qualité ? | Casus Bibli on October 24, 2013 at 6:40 am de description sémantique des relations citant-cité ou même par rapport à certains indicateurs altmetrics , mais qui a le mérite d’être facilement analysable par des outils efficaces, utiliséspar les
*
By Dantalus on October 28, 2013at 10:24 am
these apply to you, then you likely have an opportunity to help academia rise above publication-based metrics of academic impact, even if just an inch at a*
By Exploring Altmetrics - THATCamp Virginia 2013on
October 30, 2013 at 3:14 pm You can read the classic altmetrics manifesto here.*
By a future science publishing vision | Eckmeier.De|nnis on November 3, 2013 at 8:10 pm on the quality of the article, PLOS calls it ‘Article-Level Metric’ and there is also Altmetrics and others have their own ideas. But how do we measure the success of this paper in a timelymanner
*
By Defining social media terms | Heidi Allen on November 4, 2013 at 12:10 am there is a new term which tries to capture online mentions of research articles called “altmetrics” originally defined by Jason Priem. Publishers such as Elsevier and PLoS are developing new*
By Altmetrics – dlaczego warto interesować się alternatywnymi metrykami | Warsztat badacza – Emanuel Kulczycki on November 5, 2013 at 4:26 pm się jedynie na liczeniu cytowań. Warto przeczytać manifest altmetrics, który dostępny jest tutaj. Jego autorzy podkreślają, że w nauce od zawsze potrzebne są różnego rodzaju filtry, gdyż*
By Evaluating Impact: What’s your number? | PLOS Techon
November 6, 2013 at 10:51 pm trends have been summarized with the terms Article-level Metrics and altmetrics and will be the focus of the panel next Saturday. As altmetrics is still a young discipline, more*
By Articles tweeted about are 11 times more likely to be highly cited in journal articles | Real Lawyers Have Blogs on November 8, 2013 at 7:44 pm publication to the web, and publish earlier, the web offers a better way to filter science or as Altmetrics (project set up to discuss the post-peer review environment) puts it: “Instead ofwaiting months
*
By Articles tweeted about are 11 times more likely to be highly citedin journal articles
on November 12, 2013 at 11:37 pm publication to the web, and publish earlier, the web offers a better way to filter science or as Altmetrics (project set up to discuss the post-peer review environment) puts it: “Instead ofwaiting months
*
By How to take charge of science policy: making research more visible on November 15, 2013 at 8:02 pm time to update our measures of visibility and alternative metrics must be part of any modern system for quantifying research*
By Altmetriikka – vaihtoehtoista metriikkaa | Suomen yliopistokirjastojen neuvoston blogi on November 19, 2013 at 8:40 am Altmetriikka on nähty myös webnatiivin sukupolven vastaiskuna aikansa eläneelle tutkimuskulttuurille. Vuonna 2010 julistettiinkin verkossa manifesti, “Altmetrics manifesto”.*
By Blessay | Brooklyn Chick, Mere's Blogon
November 19, 2013 at 10:46 pm Altmetrics was introduced as a tool for scholars and librarians. For a complete explanation go to http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/. The main concept behind Altmetrics is that its system can easily tell you which articles are the*
By Student Research on Voluntourism: Creating “Real-Time” Benefits for Practitioners | VolunTourism Institute on November 22, 2013 at 11:34 pm more senior posts. It’s simple arithmetic. So we shouldn’t expect reform of publishing, or alt-metrics, to save people from perishing. These reforms could certainly make the system fairer andbetter,
*
By Thing 20 2013: Blog, tweet or post a link | 23 Things for Researchon November
25, 2013 at 9:55 am
article, and they may be taken into consideration when making hiring or tenure decisions. The altmetrics manifesto argues that new forms of scholarly and popular communication (e.g. social media)require a rethink
*
By Réseaux sociaux académiques….Le débat ! | Archives Ouvertes on November 29, 2013 at 4:13pm
académique évoluant à grande vitesse sur les réseaux sociaux. A ce sujet, notons une étude sur http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/ (un groupe de chercheurs l’international) ayant fait le constat que les chercheurs*
By Quelles évaluations alternatives des pratiques de la recherche ? | Science ouverte on December 7, 2013at 6:45 pm
Altmetrics Manifesto*
By Open and transparent altmetrics for discovery | OKF Open ScienceWorking Group
on December 9, 2013 at 10:51 am and in social media are considered as well. The altmetrics promise, as laid out in the excellent manifesto, is that they assess impact quicker and on a broader*
By Digging Digitally » It’s the Neoliberalism, Stupid: Why Open Access / Data / Science is not Enough on December 11, 2013 at6:53 pm
are more metrics (even Alt-metrics) really the solution to the perverse incentives embodied by our existing metrics? The much derided*
By Altmetrics: How do I rate thee? Let me count the tweets! | AdroitLiving
on December 12, 2013 at 8:53 am with a terrible name . The Altmetrics.org manifesto clearly lays out the ambitions for what those active in the field envision altmetrics to be: acting*
By Twitter Open Access Report – 4 Sep 2013 | on December 12, 2013 at 11:16 am in journals, conferences and social media. (A good starting point for learning about altmetrics is http://altmetrics.org/manifesto.) Data collected by altmetric platforms come from many sources, ranging from PDF downloads on*
By Altmetrics en el Contexto | Universo Abiertoon
December 15, 2013 at 8:06 pm investigación, incluyendo presentaciones de diapositivas, los conjuntos de datos y artículos. En “Altmetrics: a manifiesto”, hay una buena introducción a cómo altmetrics pueden enriquecer más la reflexión tradicional*
By Unbundling Academia—It's Not Just for Cable Anymore on December 23, 2013 at 10:18 pm aggregating informal assessment are already flourishing.” These measuring systems, such as "altmetrics," in part use traffic and engagement statistics that wouldn’t be unfamiliar to any*
By Veröffentlichen | Denkwerkzeuge im Wissensmanagementon
December 26, 2013 at 5:28 pm ; Groth, Paul ; Neylon, Cameron (2011): Altmetrics: A manifesto. Version 1.01, 06.12.2013. URL: http://altmetrics.org/manifesto P Dong, M Loh, A Mondry(2005) – The “impact factor” revisited.Biomedical digital*
By Steering clear of the iceberg: three ways we can fix the data-credibility crisis in science | BaciNews on December 29, 2013 at 4:18 am research is based on journal prestige, but some scientists and startups are beginning to use alternative metrics in an effort to refocus on the science itself (rather than the publishing*
By Altmetrics – fancy feature or peer review’s successor? | OpenScience
on January 10, 2014 at 4:36 pm how many people are talking about it, their opinions and whether your work is important to them. Altmetrics gives you the answer, as well as an opportunity to find out which articles are widely disputedin
*
By Twitter Open Access Report – 14 Jan 2014 | on January 14, 2014 at 11:42 am how many people are talking about it, their opinions and whether your work is important to them. Altmetrics gives you the answer, as well as an opportunity to find out which articles are widely disputedin
*
By CMPO Viewpoint on January 14, 2014 at 3:06 pm is likely to change dramatically over the next few years, as open access, self-archiving, altmetrics and other technology-driven innovations become increasingly common. This provides an opportunityto
*
By EBSCO Acquires Altmetrics Provider Plum Analytics - The DigitalShift
on January 15, 2014 at 10:46 pm field itself isn’t much older. One of its formative texts, “Altmetrics: A Manifesto,” written by ImpactStory founder Jason Priem and others, went online in October*
By Why you should ignore altmetrics and other bibliometric nightmares on January 16, 2014 at 12:04 pm science (the kind that ought to be considered for tenure) which operates on the timescale of years. Priem also says “researchers must ask if altmetrics really reflect impact” . Even he*
By Stick to Your Ribs: Altmetrics — Replacing the Impact Factor Is Not the Only Point | The Scholarly Kitchen on January 23, 2014 at 10:31 am as a container is an important value metric and one that needs to continue, the rapidly evolving alternative metrics (altmetrics) movement is concerned with more than replacing traditional journalassessment
*
By On exploding ‘evaluation machines’ and the construction of alt-metrics | The Citation Culture on January 28, 2014 at 8:30 pm Priem, J., Taraborelli, D., Groth, P., and Neylon, C. (2010a). Altmetrics: a manifesto. http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By Defining social media terms – different things to different people | Beyond Digital Strategy on February 1, 2014 at 11:05 pm there is a new term which tries to capture online mentions of research articles called “altmetrics” originally defined by Jason Priem. Publishers such as Elsevier and PLoS are developing new*
By The end of the paywall | carsten.io on February 4, 2014 at3:23 pm
of self-archiving, a growing market for open access publishers, tools such as #icanhazpdf, and new impact measures, I think it is getting ever harder for the publishers to justify their steepsubscription
*
By Discussion: "It’s the Neoliberalism, Stupid: Why instrumentalist arguments for Open Access, Open Data, and Open Science are notenough." | EDaWaX
on February 5, 2014 at 9:13 am are more metrics (even Alt-metrics) really the solution to the perverse incentives embodied by our existing metrics? The much derided*
By IMPACT or How I Learned to Start Worrying and Fear Altmetrics |Meta Rabbit
on February 5, 2014 at 9:32 am Altmetrics is the idea that scientific publications should be judged (perhaps primarily) on the impact they have in the general media, including on social media. This is in alternative to looking at either citations of journal impact factors.*
By 図書館員は、研究者への #altmetrics 支援をいつやるか? 今でs(ry | @KeitaBando on February 6, 2014 at 2:10 pm altmetricsは比較的新しい概念――altmetrics: a manifestoが初めて公開(v*
By Twitter Open Access Report – 11 Feb 2014 | on February 11, 2014 at 11:41 am has been measured in a few ways, usually through narrow citations counts or through peer review. Article level metrics (altmetrics) are becoming the new currency to measure research impact. They measure reach through article*
By Are universities turning into giant newsrooms? | PNCAU on February 11, 2014 at 4:20 pm Article level metrics (altmetrics) are becoming the new currency to measure research impact. They measure reach through article views, downloads, traditional media or mentions in social media.*
By The Ongoing Evolution of Universities into Newsrooms on February 11, 2014 at 7:36 pm Article level metrics (altmetrics) are becoming the new currency to measure research impact. They measure reach through article views, downloads, traditional media or mentions in social media.*
By Un train peut en cacher un autre…. | BibliOpen on February 14, 2014 at 11:07 am scientifique. Et certes, un peu partout, des réflexions sont conduites pour proposer d’autres métriques , d’autres*
By Mandatory confessionals upon receipt of tenure. | Sarah Hillenbrand on February 18, 2014 at 9:27 pm attention to things like the tyranny of top-tier journals, the rise of open access journals, and alt metrics. These revolutions in how we appraise a scientist’s worth are happening alongside the*
By Video Tip of the Week: Centralized Model Organism Database (CMOD) | The OpenHelix Blog on February 19,2014 at 2:35 pm
think some of the altmetrics strategies could come to support this part of the problem, but I still haven’t seen the real*
By Scientists On the Loose! My AAAS Talk – Phenomena: The Loom on February 19, 2014 at 9:44 pm blogs, Twitter, or Facebook. New companies are launching in order to measure this response, and to create an alternative to the traditional ways of measuring the impact of a paper. Instead of looking at the number of*
By Altmetrics Aren’t Always So ‘Alt’ – Ask the DevelopingWorld
on March 12, 2014 at 8:13 am Web,” have been purposely constructed to be alternatives to the JIF. Since the drafting of the altmetrics manifesto, there has been a special issue, a PLoS collection, a Mendeley group, several annual workshops, an*
By Altmetrics could enable scholarship from developing countries to receive due recognition | BAE:Biblioteca de Administración deEmpresas
on March 24, 2014 at 11:39 am Web,” have been purposely constructed to be alternatives to the JIF. Since the drafting of the altmetrics manifesto, there has been a special issue, a PLOS collection, a Mendeley group,*
By Inetbib’s Bet on Open Access and Open Science | TIB|BlogTIB|Blog on March 31, 2014 at 4:04 pm bei 20 Berufungsverfahren oder in der internen Mittelvergabe explizit auch Benutzungs-Metriken, Altmetrics oder Metriken wie WikiTrust zur Messung individueller Beiträge zu kollaborativerstellten
*
By SimplyEM – How to cite your online work in your Curriculum Vitae on April 3, 2014 at 1:00 am This discussion is particularly important in community violently aware of the need to credit the electronic impact of non-traditiona-journal publicated work in the portfolio of academic clinicians. Felix Ankel (@felixankel) distributed an email referring to the issue a few days a go at the beginning of CORD Academic Assembly, being the highlight of the mail the Altmetrics Manifesto.*
By The 3 dangers of publishing in “megajournals”–and how you can avoid them | Impactstory blog on April 3, 2014 at 3:01 pm ways they engage with your research. Social media platforms leave footprints on the web. These ”altmetrics” can be captured and aggregated at the article*
By The Perils of Megajournals–and How to Avoid Them on April 14, 2014 at 10:13 am ways they engage with your research. Social media platforms leave footprints on the web. These ”altmetrics” can be captured and aggregated at the article*
By Watching the Detectives: Review's Past and Present - Ada: A Journal of Gender, New Media, and Technology on April 21, 2014 at2:35 pm
metrics, specifically the activity that’s come to be known as bibliometrics (as well as altmetrics and article-level metrics). Much like Clay Shirky’s gracefully aging Web 2.0 bon mot—“It’s*
By Building an archaeological project repository II: Where are the research data repositories? | Open Knowledge Foundation Blog on April 22, 2014 at 10:55 am new metrics for “analyzing, and informing scholarship” and have described their ethos in their manifesto. The Research Councils and Governments have taken a much greater interest in the impact of*
By
考古学のプロジェクト・リポジトリの構築II:研究データのリポジトリはどこにあるか? | オープンデータとオープンガバメントを推進する Open Knowledge Foundation Japan on May 1, 2014 at 1:35 pmaltmetrics
コミュニティは「奨学金の分析と通知」のための新しい尺度を開発しています。またそのマニフェストに自分たちの精神(エトス)について記述しました。Research Councils
および政府は、公的に資金提供された研究のインパクトにはるかに大きな興味を持ちました。特筆すべきは、公共、社会及び産業へのインパクトが学術的なインパクトと同じくらい重要であるということです。アカデミックな業績の進歩を通じてインパクトに直接リンクさせ、そして基本的なデータに対するアクセスの改善を推奨し、研究プロセスのアウトプットを処理することで、データのレポジトリとワークフローの環境を通してこれに対応することは大学の責務です。*
By Publish and Publicise, or Perish: The Importance of Publication Impact by Mark Rubin » PhD2Published on May 8, 2014 at 3:42 pm of publication impact should take into account a broader array of alternative impact metrics, or altmetrics, that include more than just citations in scholarly*
By 4:7 für Open Access und Open Science: Der Halbzeit-Stand des Inetbib Wettspiels | TIB|BlogTIB|Blog on May 19, 2014 at 11:43 am bei 20 Berufungsverfahren oder in der internen Mittelvergabe explizit auch Benutzungs-Metriken, Altmetrics oder Metriken wie WikiTrust zur Messung individueller Beiträge zu kollaborativerstellten
*
By Watching the Detectives: Review’s Past and Present | Ada v2 Design Test Responsiveon May 19,
2014 at 3:28 pm
metrics, specifically the activity that’s come to be known as bibliometrics (as well as altmetrics and article-level metrics). Much like Clay Shirky’s gracefully aging Web 2.0 bon mot—“It’s*
By Mendeley to ORCID; Poster for ORCID Outreach Meeting, May 2014 |@KeitaBando
on May
22, 2014 at 12:13 pm explicitly conveyed, to be cited correctly by other researchers. (II) Given growing attentions on altmetrics, a concept to show how the work has been evaluated, Mendeley readership, as a research evaluation*
By CrossMark(クロスマーク) | 新規/追加-情報- | 学会誌・学術印刷やXML制作|レタープレス株式会社 on May 23, 2014 at 4:11 am参考
・CrossMarkのウェブサイト:http://www.crossref.org/crossmark/*
By
ORCIDに登録してある研究成果のaltmetricsをImpactstoryで確認してみよう| @KeitaBando on
May 30, 2014 at 6:12 am Mendeleyに自身の出版物を登録しさえすれば、Mendeley to ORCID使ってで5クリック(要する時間は10秒もかからないくらい)でORCIDと同期が取れること、既にご紹介しました。いやオレはResearchmapで業績管理したいんだ、という方にも、ResearchmapのORCID連携機能を利用して同期が取れることもご紹介しました。今回はORCIDとImpactStoryの連携機能を使って、ORCIDに登録してある出版物のaltmetricsを確認してみましょう、というコーナーをご用意しましたので、本エントリも画面キャプチャに沿って一部始終をご紹介。*
By Philanthropists: If you can’t show us the money, show us some love… | Fear and Loathing in Academia on May 30, 2014 at 12:49 pm agencies and universities, and perhaps eventually in a quantifiable way via twists on things like altmetrics. Remember, the funding agencies can control this to some extent; if you incentiviseoutreach by
*
By 替代计量学(Altmetrics)备记 » 编目精灵IIIon June 1, 2014 at
3:37 am
altmetrics: a manifesto altmetrics.org网站上的Altmetrics宣言,v1.01,2011.9.28。2010.10.26 v1.0版时用的是alt-metrics。 此图代表2010-2011年altmetrics/alt-metrics初始时认识,现在使用、引用均已纳入altmetrics计量,真有“替代”之意。 网站列出如下工具(Tool) ImpactStory:https://impactstory.org/(无法访问) ReaderMeter:http://readermeter.org/(Alpha版,2010,网站仍在、似未更新) ScienceCard:http://sciencecard.org/(2011-2012.4,已停止,网站首页推荐PLOS Article-Level Metrics等4家) PaperCritic:http://www.papercritic.com/(版权显示2011-2012) Crowdometer:http://crowdometer.org/(无法访问) (另:维基百科提到CitedIn:http://www.citedin.org/,目前仅有jQueryUI页面)
*
By Data Carpentry, online contribution and engagement – June 12, 11ET | Mozilla Science Lab on June 6, 2014 at 3:47 pm Research and Data team at Wikimedia, and was also closely involved in the creation of the “Altmetrics Manifesto“. Do tune*
By Disciplinary dilemma: working across research silos is harder than it looks | InfoClose on June 12, 2014 at 12:26 pm there are other difficulties. Metrics for investigate evaluation tend to strengthen a appetite of normal educational*
By What’s all the huha about? ‘Altmetrics’: uncovering the invisible in research « Newsam News on June 12, 2014 at 5:39 pm There’s been a lot of debate about the validity of impact factors over the years (and there have been many attempts to measure impact but none wholly accurate). Just this week on Twitter, the discussion took off again after the publication of an article by Jennifer Howard entitled “Scholars seek betters ways to track online impact” in The Chronicle of Higher Education (January 29th 2012 ) which highlights the work on “alternative metrics” done by Jason Priem (a graduate student in library sciences at the University of North Carolina) who helped write a manifesto on “altmetrics” (see: http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/).*
By Top Ten Leonardo articles as measured by their social media impact| Roger Malina
on June 16, 2014 at 4:04 am http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By All metrics are wrong, but some are useful | Science and the Web on June 16, 2014 at 9:51 am web-based metrics for measuring research output, have recently received a lot of attention. Started only in 2010, altmetrics have become a phenomenon both in the scientific community and in thepublishing world.
*
By Kohteena avoimet julkaisuarkistot | Itä-Suomen yliopiston kirjaston blogi – Matkalla IFLAan 2012 on June 24, 2014 at 12:14 pm perinteistä tieteellistä mittaamista. Kotiläksyksi jäi myös luettavaa ja tutustumista: Altmetrics: a manifesto. Glasgown yliopiston arkisto ja altmetriikan hyödyntäminen, Altmetrics inlibraries and
*
By Kohteena avoimet julkaisuarkistot | UEFLibrary on June 24, 2014 at 1:09 pm perinteistä tieteellistä mittaamista. Kotiläksyksi jäi myös luettavaa ja tutustumista: Altmetrics: a manifesto.Glasgown yliopiston arkisto ja altmetriikan hyödyntäminen, Altmetrics in libraries and*
By Conceptos básicos sobre Altmetrics - Infotecarioson
June 25, 2014 at 5:01 am Priem, J., Taraborelli, D., Groth, P. & Neylon, C. (2010a), Altmetrics: a manifesto. http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By SLA Vancouver, Reflections after the Conference « EffervescentLibrarian's Blog
on June 25, 2014 at 4:20 pm Topics: The selling of the SLA Headquarters building was a hot topic, also, altmetrics, and lots of Twitter folks this year! My favorite Twitter folks: @leslieR (Leslie*
By Impactstory (Uncover your full research impact) @Impactstory |bluesyemre
on June 27, 2014 at 9:04 am context: To help researcher move from raw altmetrics data to impact profiles that tell data-driven stories, we sort metricsbyengagement
*
By Altmetrics, Altmétricas, Altmetrías: nuevas perspectivas sobre la visibilidad y el impacto de la investigación científica |bibliotecaceu
on June 30, 2014 at 8:25 am 2 Altmetrics: a manifesto. Altmetrics. . Available from: http://altmetrics.org/manifesto*
By Is it already time for alt-alt-metrics? | Nature is not a Book on July 1, 2014 at 9:16 am solution to both problems is a system of “alternative metrics” (altmetrics) of scholarly influence that seeks to replace or amend the established standards of peer review,*
By Libraries News and Events » Blog Archive » Altmetrics for librarians and researcherson July 2, 2014 at
7:17 pm
Altmetrics – as an alternative measure of impact – for scholarly research are in the news. The Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) and the San Fransisco Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA) are researching and recommending other measures than traditional journal metrics for scholarly impact.*
By Averigua si eres un científico de alto impacto con altmetrics on July 11, 2014 at 3:16 pm Altmetrics: A manifesto*
By SciCast #38 — Aquele com a sopa de letrinhas on July 18, 2014 at 3:06 am Almetrics Manifesto;*
By The Big Data Landscape: A Field Guide for the Rest of Us | DC/SLA on July 20, 2014 at 8:56 pm way we think about research. Alternative methods for measuring the impact of a publication, like Altmetrics, take into account social sharing and other data to quickly shed light on trending topics andthe
*
By O altmetryce i jej potencjalnych zastosowaniach w świecie nauki i szkolnictwie wyższym | Babin on August 12, 2014 at 12:13 pm altmetryki (altmetrics, ALM, article level metrics), czyli alternatywnej metryki jako nowego, powiązanego*
By Research Impact at the Article Level | FHI Library on August 19, 2014 at 9:36am
level metrics (read altmetrics: a manifesto) are available on different journals. Several publishers offer data collected fromthird parties
*
By It’s the Neoliberalism, Stupid: Why Open Access / Data / Science is not Enough | archaeoINaction on August 22, 2014 at 10:49 am are more metrics (even Alt-metrics) really the solution to the perverse incentives embodied by our existing metrics? The much derided*
By Altmetrics | Biblioteksbloggenon August 27,
2014 at 10:57 am
Läs mer om Altmetrics på deras hemsida och varför inte testa din impact via ImpactStory.*
By NMC Library Horizon Report 2014 (Pt. 5 of 6): Bibliometrics/Citation Technologies & Open Content | Building CreativeBridges
on September 3, 2014 at 8:31 pm is, for example, an introduction to altmetrics—an alternative to bibliometrics that “takes into account a scholar’s onlinesocial media
*
By Altmetrics: estudio sobre autores EPI y análisis de almetric.com |EC3Metrics
on September 7, 2014 at 10:18 am Priem, J.; Taraborelli, D.; Groth, P.; Neylon, C. (2010). Alt-metrics: A Manifesto.*
By Almétricas: los nuevos indicadores para medir el impacto y la visibilidad de la investigación 2.0 | Biblioteca UJIBiblioteca UJI on September 18, 2014 at 12:09 pm Priem, J., Taraborelli, D., Groth, P. & Neylon, C. (2010a), Altmetrics: a manifesto.*
By Beyond the Impact Factor: Altmetrics | Research Bites | LancasterUniversity
on September 19, 2014 at 3:40 pm the context of huge increases in publication output, the Altmetrics manifesto claims that we need new ways to filter for quality. Altmetrics is also an attempt to catch up with*
By JUFO tasojen hienosäätö pohjautuen alanormitettuun viiteindeksiin | Miten musiikki toimii? on September 23, 2014 at 10:47 am Tunnustan myös auliisti, että suuret viittausmäärät ei sinänsä ole automaattisesti laadun tae, sillä ne reagoivat artikkelien ja kanavien huomioinnin syystä tai toisesta, joka ei välttämättä vastaa aina laatua. Toinen ongelma on, että tietenkin tutkijat ja kanavat ovat oppineet vaikuttamaan indekseihin erinäisillä keinoilla. Ongelmista huolimatta viittausindeksien ja kanavien laadun välinen suhde on tunnustettu useasti (Bergstrom, 2007; Ravallion & Wagstaff, 2011, ks. myös Baneyx, 2008) ja indeksejä on esimerkiksi Ruotsissa sovellettu suoraan laadun mittarina. Veikkaan että emme pääse indekseistä eroon tulevaisuudessa, sillä indeksit ovat tulossa koko ajan herkemmiksi, nopeammiksi ja niiden valikoima laajenee (artikkelien lataukset, niihin viittaukset, sekä niistä käyty elektroninen viestintä, jota voisi kutsua vaihtoehtoindekseiksi alt-metrics).*
By Use Altmetrics to Build your Scholarly Community | InternationalLibrarians Network
on October 2, 2014 at 10:30 pm conundrum can be helped along with altmetrics. Altmetrics, a term coined by Jason Priem, are metrics about articles, data sets, videos, web pages, and*
By 用Altmetric衡量個人研究論文的影響力 - Enago英論閣 部落格:論文撰寫與科學研究發表支援 on October 6, 2014 at 12:54 amAltmetric宣言
*
By Open Research and Data workshop | INSider on October 8, 2014 at 10:34 pm the concept of alternative metrics (altmetrics) and its application to research*
By Reflections on the 1:AM altmetrics conference | David Davies'Weblog
on October 12, 2014 at 6:06 pm The altmetrics manifesto, written back in 2010, makes threebold assertions:
*
By The intrinsic multivariate nature of Research & Teaching performance | Dawn Bazely on October 15, 2014 at 1:23 pm of grants from one agency over time e.g. NSERC; 7. Number of grants from different agencies; 8. Altmetrics; 9. Kardashian-Index; 10. Blogs; 11. Media interviews; 12. Volunteered conferencepresentations;
*
By 3 important steps to getting more credit for your peer reviews - Impactstory blog on October 16, 2014 at 3:30 pm mentions on scholarly blogs, or new Mendeley readers for your reviews. Tracking citations and altmetrics (social web indicators that tell you when others are sharing, discussing, saving, and reusing your*
By Tracking the impacts of data – beyond citations | e-ScienceCommunity
on
October 16, 2014 at 5:29 pm Altmetrics are indicators of the reuse, discussion, sharing, and other interactions humans can have with a scholarly object. These interactions tend to leave traces on the scholarly web.*
By Going with the Flow: The Intersection of Information Strategy andTime | DC/SLA
on October 19, 2014 at 10:16 pm and discourse is changing our timescales for scientific discourse, as well as our measures (e.g., altmetrics alongsidecitation
*
By ¿Por qué Open Access?on
October 20, 2014 at 6:11 pm Es urgente e imperativo, por tanto, cambiar las modalidades de reconocimiento para cambiar los hábitos de producción, circulación y uso del conocimiento. Es urgente e imperativo, por tanto, apoyar las iniciativas de exploración de métricas alternativas, Alt-metrics, y suscribir declaraciones como la de Alt-metrics: a Manifesto.*
By Playing with altmetrics | The Research Whisperer on October 20, 2014 at 9:01 pm To help researcher move from raw altmetrics data to impact profiles that tell data-driven stories, we sort metrics by engagementtype and
*
By Teamlabs.es - ¿Por qué Open Access? - Teamlabs on October 21, 2014 at2:49 pm
Es urgente e imperativo, por tanto, cambiar las modalidades de reconocimiento para cambiarlos hábitos de producción, circulación y uso del conocimiento. Es urgente e imperativo, por tanto, apoyar las iniciativas de exploración de métricas alternativas, Alt-metrics, y suscribir declaraciones como la de Alt-metrics: a Manifesto.*
By Open Access and Altmetrics | University Library Blog on October 23, 2014 at 12:52 pm are defined by altmetric.org as “the creation and study of new metrics based on the Social Web for analyzing, and*
By Thing 6 – further adventures in Twitter | Newbie Researcher on October 24, 2014 at 3:58 pm Recognising Twitter has also been a hot topic this week in the arguments around finding alternative metrics to evidence the impact of research – Should citing via Twitter or other online platforms become a key measure in the same way as citation in a peer-reviewed journal? Altmetrics is interesting on this:http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By #38: Altmetria | SciCaston
November 3, 2014 at 3:53 pm Almetrics Manifesto;*
By Altmetrics | SGM Publishingon November 12,
2014 at 11:50 am
the traditional measure of impact, the journal impact factor. In 2010, with the publication of the altmetrics manifesto, an alternative measure of impact was proposed. Since then, altmetrics have been hotlydebated and
*
By Beyond Journals: Altmetrics for Mapping and Measuring Scholarly Publishing | Digital Information & Technology Adventureson November
12, 2014 at 7:07 pm
didn’t take enough account of the growing dissemination ecosystems afford by the web. The 2010 altmetrics manifesto argues that more diverse metrics were required to fully reflect a morediverse scholarly
*
By Impactstory Advisor of the Month: Keita Bando (November 2014) -Impactstory blog
on November
13, 2014 at 8:06 pm
altmetrics around 2010. As an Open Access advocate, I support Jason Priem et al’s “altmetrics: a manifesto” and I am convinced that we can use altmetrics to change the open access*
By มาทำความรู้จักกับ Altmetrics (ตอนที่ 1) | Supaporn's Blogon
November 15, 2014 at 2:49 pm Priem J., Taraborelli D., Groth P., Neylon C., “Alt-metrics: A manifesto,” Retrieved 14112014 from http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By Discovering Altmetrics | Information Things on November 15, 2014 at 4:17 pm thing) by the instigators of the idea, setting out their vision for what altmetrics can be found here. In this they also, with admirable honesty, present the notable question mark that hangs overhow
*
By Discovering Altmetrics | The Modern Information Specialist on November 16, 2014 at 2:54 pm academics are proponents of taking altmetrics into consideration. According to Jason Priem on altmetrics.org’s manifesto: “Our point…is to present a better, fuller alternative to the way we measure impact now”*
By Quality vs quantity… | The Nature of Dita on November 16, 2014 at 4:13 pm The evolving field of altmetrics provides article-level data. This is in contrast to the traditional bibliometric, journal level, citation method which has received criticism for it’s quantitative bias that can be slow to reveal and open to manipulation.*
By Thing 19 2014: Blog, tweet or post a link | 23 Things for Researchon November
17, 2014 at 7:10 am
article, and they may be taken into consideration when making hiring or tenure decisions. The altmetrics manifesto argues that new forms of scholarly and popular communication (e.g. social media)require a rethink
*
By Altmetrics workshop recap: part 1 – the Altmetrics Guide | Scholarly Communications @ ISU Library on November 17, 2014 at 10:27 pm couple of weeks. I took inspiration from many places including the PLOS Altmetrics collection, the original manifesto, and from other guides on the topic. While there is a lot of information on altmetricsavailable
*
By Altmetrics: Alternative Metric | DITA enlightenment! on November 18, 2014 at 5:52 pm (Alternative Metrics) which was developed in the 2010 is an evolving concept, According to Jason Priem, Paul Groth & Dario Taraborelli Altmetrics is the study and use of scholarly impact measures based on activity in online tools*
By Discovering Alternative Metrics | David Phillips on DITA on November 20, 2014 at 2:26 pm my previous post I very briefly mentioned the idea of alternative metrics in relation to the TAGS application. Since then in our DITA lab sessions we have had the chance to*
By
MendeleyとwriteLaTeXコラボで実現されるクラウド研究管理術(と、これをベースに構成してみた書籍(執筆)のご提案)| @KeitaBando
on
November 30, 2014 at 7:16 am この章では、オンラインで公開した自身の研究成果が、専門(オンライン)誌やブログ、ソーシャルメディアなどでどの様な評判となっているかを計る新たな取り組みaltmetricsの概要について解説した後、どの様にaltmetricsを確認できるのか、AltmetricとImpactstoryというふたつのツールを紹介します。前章(研究成果管理)でORCIDに研究成果を管理できていれば、Impactstoryがその情報を自動取得して全ての研究成果のaltmetricsを概観することが可能となります。altmetricsは新たな概念ではありますが、今後重要な指標となる可能性があり、終章で押さえておきます。*
By Nature – lesen ja, drucken nein! | wisspub.neton
December 5, 2014 at 7:36 am „eindeutige URL“ nutzen können, werden die Klickzahlen auf nature.com erhöht. Mit Blick auf Altmetrics ein nachvollziehbarer*
By What are Altmetrics? An Introduction | The University of ChicagoLibrary News
on December 5, 2014 at 9:15 pm Altmetrics: A Manifesto – Jason Priem, Dario Taraborelli, Paul Groth, Cameron Neylon*
By 1:AM altmetrics project funding awarded | 1:AM London on December 17, 2014 at 1:59 pm of scholarly outputs by broader audiences, particularly audiences beyond the more scholarly ones (Priem, et al., 2010). Several altmetric data providers and aggregators have appeared during the recent years. However,*
By A social media dashboard for researchers – taming the digital anarchy for nerds | Water Underground on January 6, 2015 at 5:43 am would be great to link all kinds of altmetrics with this simple, social professor dashboard. Altmetrics are alternative metrics to thewidely-used
*
By Will Loop, a New Social Network for Scientists, Help or Hinder Research? - Trendingnewsz.com on January 15, 2015 at 8:07 pm Another aspect of Loop’s appeal to researchers is its focus on what researchers refer to as “altmetrics”—the concept, not the company—which measure research impact using indicators likesocial buzz
*
By #HEFCEMetrics: More on Metrics for the Arts and Humanities |Ernesto Priego
on January 16, 2015 at 10:25 am of new metrics based on the Social Web for analyzing, and informing scholarship.” (Priem et al 2010). Altmetrics usually use APIs and algorithms to track and create metrics from the activity onthe
*
By Sheep Rot & Rogue Publishers: the birth of advertising in early scientific journals - The Ubiquitous Librarian - The Chronicle ofHigher Education
on January 20, 2015 at 4:21 pm I’ve been watching a great talk by Jason Priem on altmetrics.*
By Scholarly Communication, ‘Altmetrics’, and Social Theory | Managing My Impression on January23, 2015 at 9:41 pm
of citation theories and social theories to popular media and social media metrics (so-called altmetrics) being collected by sites like Altmetric.com, ImpactStory.org, and Plum Analytics. These metrics*
By Mesurer la performance de la recherche. Tout un programme | Zilsel on January 24, 2015 at 7:50 am pour le sociologue des sciences un tout nouveau champ défricher : les altmetrics, ou métriques alternatives, sont les dernières arrivées dans ce joyeux champ de la scientométrie, version science 2.0.*
By Are scientific papers actually read? | To infinity, and beyond! on January 25, 2015 at 6:35 pm for example by being featured in blogs or other social media (which can be captured by so called altmetrics). But still, most of us would suspect that many articles are cited but not read. Isthere a way
*
By Auf Open Access gewettet und gewonnen: InetBib-Wettspiel zu Ende | LIBREAS.Library Ideas on February 5, 2015 at 2:58 pm bei 20 Berufungsverfahren oder in der internen Mittelvergabe explizit auch Benutzungs-Metriken, Altmetricsoder Metriken wie WikiTrust zur Messung individueller Beiträge zu kollaborativerstellten
*
By Altmetrics in action: applications for researchers | Altmetric.com on February 10, 2015 at 11:09 am defined, alternative metrics, or altmetrics are indicators of impact and engagement that extend far beyond traditional methods ofinfluence
*
By What can fiction publishers learn from altmetrics? | PUB802 on February 28, 2015 at 3:09 am Jason, Dario Taraborelli, Paul Groth, and Cameron Neylon. “Altmetrics: A Manifesto,” 2010. http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/. 8. “What Does Altmetric Do?” Altmetric. Accessed February 27,2015.
*
By The Ridiculous Finesse of the Academic Question | The Dumpling Carton February 28,
2015 at 6:16 pm
“Uhhuh… what the hell are altmetrics?”*
By Les statistiques dans HAL | Le blog du CCSDon March
3, 2015 at 9:45 am
par quiconque consulte la notice. Ce pavé est complété parfois par d’autres indicateurs (altmetrics) qui comptabilisent les mentions sur les réseaux sociaux : combien de fois un dépôt aété
*
By Study analyzes the use of social networks in the assessment of scientific impact | SciELO in Perspective on March 13, 2015 at 7:01 pm PRIEM, J., and et al. Altmetrics: a manifesto. Altmetrics.org, 2010, pp. 1–5. Available from: http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By Estudio analiza el uso de las redes sociales en la evaluación del impacto científico | SciELO en Perspectiva on March 13, 2015 at 7:12 pm PRIEM, J., and et al. Altmetrics: a manifesto. Altmetrics.org, 2010, pp. 1–5. Available from: http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By BibSonomy :: publication :: Altmetrics: a Manifesto on March 15, 2015 at 9:03 pmURL
*
By Quelles évaluations alternatives des pratiques de la recherche ? | Sciences communes on March 25, 2015at 6:12 pm
Altmetrics Manifesto*
By How Articles Get Noticed and Advance the Scientific Conversation - The Official PLOS Blog on March 30, 2015 at 7:01 pm into their research life cycles, altmetrics researcher (and coiner of the term) Jason Priem, writing in 2011, saw scientists interacting on Twitter as a “revolutionary form of scholarlycommunication,”
*
By Are we using the right metrics? | drbexl.co.ukon March
30, 2015 at 9:59 pm
community has recently emerged in an effort to achieve this. Complete with a manifesto – at altmetrics.org – this community is striving to understand and measure the products and practices of*
By Estudo analisa o uso de redes sociais na avaliação do impacto científico | SciELO em Perspectiva on April 7, 2015 at 2:20 pm PRIEM, J., and et al. Altmetrics: a manifesto. Altmetrics.org, 2010, pp. 1–5. Available from: http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By Researchers - it's time to start talking about social media and altmetrics! | Social Media at Queen'son April
10, 2015 at 8:21 pm
metrics and not just citations when evaluating impact and engagement. These diverse ‘altmetrics’ (alternative metrics), such as Tweets, shares and downloads, can allow researchers to gaugequickly
*
By Oped in SCMP: Open Data to Fix Academic Fraud - Open Data Hong Kong on April 15, 2015 at 10:05 am in the media. Many of these measures can also be subject to gaming, but having a broader range of “alternative metrics” should be harder to manipulate. China is overtaking the US to become thebiggest producer of
*
By In the Library with the Lead Pipe » Librarian, Heal Thyself: A Scholarly Communication Analysis of LIS Journalson
April 22, 2015 at 9:11 pm based on the citations an article receives, which have in turn been equated with quality.9 The h-index is an impact measure for an individual, whereas impact factor applies to the journal*
By #EdTech with Eric | #ET4Online – Beyond Alt-metrics: Identities and Influence Online on April 23, 2015 at 1:44 pm Altmetrics: a manifesto – “No one can read everything. We rely on filters to make sense of the scholarly literature, but the narrow, traditional filters are being swamped. However, the growth of new, online scholarly tools allows us to make new filters; these altmetrics reflect the broad, rapid impact of scholarship in this burgeoning ecosystem. We call for more tools and research based onaltmetrics.”
*
By Newsflo brings new impact metrics to Mendeley | Mendeley Blog on April 29, 2015 at 8:01 pm the most accurate way of determining the reach and usefulness of research. We’ve seen the rise of Altmetrics and Mendeley has contributed a lot to this, collaborating with others to providereadership
*
By altmetrics: a manifesto - Unjapanologist/非実在日本学者on May 9, 2015 at
6:56 am
altmetrics: a manifesto*
By
ウェブ・アノテーションの現在と未来を語るカンファレンス「I ANNOTATE 2015」に参加してきました | @KeitaBando on May 15, 2015 at 10:10 am Hypothes.isがORCIDと連携したり、altmetricsの要素のひとつになるならば、・・ 妄想が広がり、これはDanに会って色々教えて貰わねば、とメール交換していた時、「IANNOTATE
2015」を開催するからそこに来い、とお誘い頂いた、というのが経緯です。*
By Impact von Publikationen über Social Media mit Altmetrics sichtbarmachen |
on May 21, 2015 at 10:36 am zugänglich zu machen. Die Analyse und Visualisierung dieser Daten wird zusammenfassend als „Altmetrics“ bezeichnet. Gleichzeitig ist Altmetric auch ein Unternehmen, das diese Dienstleistung anbietet.*
By Not everything that counts can be counted | Symptoms Of TheUniverse
on June 15, 2015 at 9:42 pm “…to find ways to attach to each piece of work the value that the scientific community places on it though use and citation. The rate of accrual of citations remains rather sluggish, even in today’s wired world, so attempts are being made to capture the internet buzz that greets each new publication; there are interesting innovations in this regard from the likes of PLOS, Mendeley andaltmetrics.org.”
*
By Guest post: improving impact factors | International LibrariansNetwork
on June 16, 2015 at 1:13 pm principles for achieving the former, while the latter approach focuses on article-level metrics and altmetrics, usually hand-in-hand with open access, open data, and post-publication peer*
By Recording the labours of the ingenious: 350 years of the scholarly journal | The Policy Press Blog on June 19, 2015 at 9:54 am in research dissemination, like FigShare? And the ways of measuring impact using tools like Altmetrics and Kudos? Researchers are under pressure now not only to study and publish, but to provethat what
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By Altmetrics: The Impacts on Impact | Microbe Post on June 29, 2015 at 4:03 pm the traditional measure of impact, the journal impact factor. In 2010, with the publication of the altmetrics manifesto, an alternative measure of impact was proposed. Since then, altmetrics have been hotlydebated and
*
By Alternative media and metrics for academic promotion. | ICE Blog on July 7, 2015 at 1:32 pm Altmetrics manifesto.*
By Manifiesto Altmetrics - Infotecarioson July 7, 2015
at 2:03 pm
quería contarles acerca del Manifiesto Almetrics, que fue escrito en el año 2010 por Jason Priem (@jasonpriem) -el creador deltérmino-, Dario
*
By A New Framework for Information Literacy | 3 Sundial Ave on July 7, 2015 at 6:21 pm next? Altmetrics in the henhouse?? Certainly. But that is for another day, another*
By The REF: what is the measure of success? on July 9, 2015 at 12:26 pm might not otherwise come across — to provide more efficient filters as the authors of the altmetrics manifesto would have it. But it would be quite a leap from where we are now to feed thesealternative
*
By ImpactStory metrics of academic research outreach piloted by Pensoft Publishers | Pensoft blog on July 22, 2015 at 2:51 pm Being philanthropically-funded and not-for-profit, this project builds on the belief that open altmetrics are key for building the coming era of Web-native science. ImpactStory is committed to*
By Only Five Years Old | 2:AM Amsterdam on August 5, 2015 at 12:51 pm release of the altmetrics manifesto is often considered the “birth moment” in 2010, alongside the ALM project in its earlydays at
*
By
いま話題の新しい論文評価指標「オルトメトリクス(Altmetrics)」 | 学術英語アカデミー on August 6, 2015 at 6:18am
学術論文の影響度を測る指標には、インパクトファクター(Impact Factor)やh指数(h-index)などが知られていますが、近年、「オルトメトリクス(Altmetrics)」という新しい論文評価指標が注目されています。オルトメトリクスは、論文の引用数を反映するだけでなく、論文の閲覧数、ダウンロード数、フェイスブックやツイッターなどソーシャルメディアや報道機関でのコメント数など、論文がもつ影響力のさまざまな面を反映しています。オルトメトリクスはインパクトファクターに取って代わることはできるのでしょうか? 専門家たちに聞いてみました。*
By altmetrics: a manifesto – altmetrics.org | unicritique on August 21, 2015 at 8:00 pm via altmetrics: a manifesto – altmetrics.org.*
By PressForward Institute Welcome | on August 25, 2015 at 5:28 pm we can’t be oblivious to the behaviors of liking and retweeting—impact factors and altmetrics already are evolving concepts in scholarly communication. But we do need to learn how tomake them
*
By Altmetrics and Research Assessment: How Not to Let History Repeat Itself | The Scholarly Kitchen on September 2, 2015 at 10:19 am it in publishing circles. It certainly seems to have been met with less buzz than the now iconic altmetrics manifesto, which Jason Priem et al., published in 2010. As Cassidy Sugimoto (@csugimoto)pointed out in the
*
By How Articles Get Noticed and Advance the Scientific Conversation— Octa Eye
on September 18, 2015 at 10:48 am into their research life cycles, altmetrics researcher (and coiner of the term) Jason Priem, writing in 2011, saw scientists interacting on Twitter as a “revolutionary form of scholarlycommunication,”
*
By What is ‘research impact’ in an interconnected world? |Unlocking Research
on September 25,
2015 at 6:49 am
is fairly easily measured. There are systems in place now to look at this kind of activity. Altmetrics.org moves beyond the traditional academic internal measures of peer review, Journal ImpactFactor
*
By What Libraries can learn from Mendeley | ZBW MediaTalk on October 6, 2015 at 9:39 am technology breakthroughs led to the creation of altmetrics, which affect the research output. These new metrics have become a buzzword in the last years.*
By Lessons from 2AM | Managing My Impression on October 13, 2015 at 9:12 am that “altmetrics” was the wrong term to be using. But then I took another look at the altmetrics manifesto (the 5th anniversary of this important object was celebrated at the conference) andreevaluated my
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By 2:AM conference and Altmetrics workshop | juliembirkholz on October 13, 2015 at 1:30 pm via youtube by sessions. Altmetrics are the so-called alternative metrics to science: see the short manifesto. These two events discussed alternative metrics to science. The 2:AM conferencewas a mix of
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By Publicando, que es gerundio | El Bichólogoon October
15, 2015 at 7:14 am
real de esta medición y se están buscando nuevas opciones, como altmetrics. Se trata de un conjunto de mediciones alternativas que no sólo incluyen el número de citas, sino que incorporan otro tipo de menciones, como pueden*
By Altmetrics15 – 5 years in, what do we know? | Altmetric.com on October 15, 2015 at 11:33 am share and discuss their findings with like-minded academics. It’s been five years since the Altmetrics Manifesto was first published, and it’s clear that five years in, the data is stillthrowing up a lot
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By The altmetrics manifesto – 5 years on | I&M / I&O 2.0 on October 16, 2015 at 3:56 pm oil spill, Wikileaks, and the Arab spring. The year social media really exploded. And the year the altmetrics manifesto was published*
By Celebrating Five Years of Altmetrics | The Scholarly Kitchen on October 20, 2015 at 9:31 am how I felt on learning that it’s already / only five years since the “altmetrics manifesto” was published. At last week’s 2:AM conference in Amsterdam, the authors of that*
By Open Access Defined, Distilled, and De-mythed by Katherine Gerwig |Metro State Library
on October 21, 2015 at 7:03 pm most OA journals do not have high impact factors, but article-level metrics and other metrics (altmetrics) of article impact increasingly show promise), and solutions for handling article-processing*
By The altmetrics manifesto – 5 years on | UBU Blog on November 10, 2015 at 9:45 am oil spill, Wikileaks, and the Arab spring. The year social media really exploded. And the year the altmetrics manifesto was published*
By Internet Librarian International. 20th-21st October, London | Scottish Government Library on November 17, 2015 at 6:42 pm Altmetrics.org – alternative bibliometrics.*
By Si Febvre et Bloch s’étaient souciés de leur RG Score, ils n’auraient pas fondé l’école des Annales | L'histoire contemporaine à l'ère numérique on November 30, 2015 at 1:25 pm Ainsi, grâce (à cause de?) Research Gate (ou Mendeley, ou Academia.edu5…) vous pourrez travailler sur votre réputation en ligne, améliorer votre index de citation. Cette tendance va de pair avec l’apparition des “altmetrics“.*
By Researchers – it’s time to start talking about social media and altmetrics! | Social Media QUB on December 1, 2015 at 12:47 pm metrics and not just citations when evaluating impact and engagement. These diverse ‘altmetrics’ (alternative metrics), such as Tweets, shares and downloads, can allow researchers to gaugequickly
*
By Digital Scholarship @ CUA: Not Just the Journal Article! | University Librarieson December 1,
2015 at 3:00 pm
articles are including all the alt-metrics or bibliometrics, which include links to news articles or tweets or number of timesdownloaded, as
*
By New Top trends in academic libraries: ACRL – Stephen's Lighthouse on December 24, 2015 at 11:25 am , “Altmetrics: A Manifesto,” (v.1.0), 26 October 2010. Revised, (v 1.01), September 28, 2011,http://altmetrics.org/manifesto.*
By Altmetrics en el Contexto | universoabierto.com on January 1, 2016 at 2:01 pm investigación, incluyendo presentaciones de diapositivas, los conjuntos de datos y artículos. En “Altmetrics: a manifiesto”, hay una buena introducción a cómo altmetrics pueden enriquecer más la reflexión tradicional*
By Newsflo brings new impact metrics to Mendeley | on January 5, 2016 at 3:46 pm the most accurate way of determining the reach and usefulness of research. We’ve seen the rise of Altmetrics and Mendeley has contributed a lot to this, collaborating with others to providereadership
*
By Are we using the right metrics? - drbexl.co.ukon
January 23, 2016 at 5:32 pm community has recently emerged in an effort to achieve this. Complete with a manifesto – at altmetrics.org – this community is striving to understand and measure the products and practices of*
By Oh Aye* | Strix in Silvaon January 29,
2016 at 3:02 pm
this whole area is having on libraries and HE in general (as well as related areas such as altmetrics and research data management) and the work this is generating, newly minted librarians need to be*
By Measuring scholarly impact has never been so cool or so colorful | on February 1, 2016 at 5:51 pm Priem, a founder of the altmetrics movement and author of “Altmetrics: A Manifesto” tells*
By Altmetrics As A New Research Impact Indicator | UniversityLibraries
on February 18, 2016 at 9:19 pm http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By Was HSUfind mit Donuts zu tun hat Universitätsbibliothek der HSU : Blog HSU-BlogHSU-Blogon February
25, 2016 at 12:14 pm eng sich die Ressource Aufmerksamkeit im Internet auf einen bestimmten Artikel streut. Die Website Altmetrics.org definiert Altmetrics entsprechend als „creation and study of new metrics basedon the Social
*
By Inetbib’s Bet on Open Access and Open Science | TIB-Blog on February 25, 2016 at 4:15 pm bei 20 Berufungsverfahren oder in der internen Mittelvergabe explizit auch Benutzungs-Metriken, Altmetrics oder Metriken wie WikiTrust zur Messung individueller Beiträge zu kollaborativerstellten
*
By How to get your research noticed online | Social Media QUB on March 1, 2016 at 11:10 am for your different profiles. Or you might want to consider using ImpactStory ($60 per year), an altmetrics-focused repository where you can upload various products of research and integrate youronline
*
By Quem se importa com o Índice de Impacto? – SBI – Sociedade Brasileira de Imunologia on March 1, 2016 at 5:14 pm outras medidas vão aparecer. Na realidade, a PLoS e a Cell Press já usam há alguns anos o Altmetrics9, uma forma de medida de impacto que agrega visualizações do conteúdo, compartilhamento emredes
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By Word of the Day: Altmetrics | Next Generation Extension on March 1, 2016 at 5:56 pm Priem, D. Taraborelli, P. Groth, C. Neylon (2010), Altmetrics: A manifesto, 26 October 2010.*
By what is the economic model of the digital humanities? | The LinkedLibrarian
on March 3, 2016 at 2:29 am of evaluation (particularly for tenure credit) of digital humanities work, of much of the altmetrics conversation, and to some extent the question of what training our advanced graduate students*
By Exploring altmetrics | RESEARCH NEWS from Swansea UniversityLibrary
on March 17, 2016 at 10:50 am of new metrics based on the Social Web for analyzing, and informing scholarship”. See the altmetrics manifesto for the original explanation and justification; the Wikipedia article hasfurther background.
*
By A Guide to Using Social Media for Research Purposes by Matt Holland | LIHNN Clinical Librarians on March 29, 2016 at 1:24 pm a manifesto Available from: http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/ Gumperger,*
By Another year | Joe's Blog on August 27, 2016 at7:26 pm
Crossref Event Data is a service to collect and distribute things that happen around scholarly articles. When someone talks about an article on a blog or social media, we collect it. It’s very exciting subject, as it affects the way that scholarship and particularly science is appraised and measured. You can read all about it in the altmetrics manifesto.*
By PubMed 2.0? Lessons for scientific literature in the digital age.– Site Title
on September 13, 2016 at 2:31 am J. Priem, D. Taraborelli, P. Groth, C. Neylon (2010), Altmetrics: A manifesto, 26 October*
By ASSAf Scholarly Publishing Unit: September 2016 Communique | ASSAf Scholarly Publishing Blog on September 21, 2016 at 1:24 pm read the Altmetrics Manifesto for the rationale behind the*
By Scicast #38: Altmetria – Podflix - #SciCast - Podcaston September 23,
2016 at 2:10 pm
Almetrics Manifesto;*
By A Guide to Using Social Media for Research Purposes (Version 2) by Matt Holland | LIHNN Clinical Librarians on October 26, 2016 at 2:15 pm a manifesto Available from: http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/ [ Accessed 27 March 2016*
By I Congresso Científico Brasileiro da Wikipédia discute pesquisa e disseminação de conteúdo - Blog do IBPAD on November 4, 2016 at 10:19 pm além de defensor de dados/acesso/projetos de sistemas abertos – também líder do altmetrics. Com a keynote “Open, collaborative, reproducible, research to support free knowledge”,ele
*
By Altmetrics, ‘Altmetric,’ and Science Communication – Science Communication Breakdown on November 11, 2016 at 10:06 am appeared in 2010, the year Jason Priem, Dario Taraborelli, Paul Groth and Cameron Neylon wrote Altmetrics: a manifesto. Building on previous research, the manifesto proposed that social media indicatorscan be used to
*
By Making research count: Lessons on turning evidence into action from the Transfer Project – The Transfer Project on November 21, 2016 at 5:01 pm while new innovations continue to emerge, including Research Contribution Framework, SenseMaker®, AltMetrics and Social Network*
By Reading Lists: Draft – chaz lillyon
November 30, 2016 at 4:05 pm “Altmetrics.org.” Altmetrics a Manifesto. Web. 12 Dec. 2015. http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By Will Machines Make Humans Obsolete? – To Infinity & Beyond on December 4, 2016 at 8:30 pm http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By Automata in the library – The Cathologuer on December 5, 2016 at 8:18 am Altmetrics is a good place to start, mainly because it is a clear example of digital technology being used to aid what in some ways was (and still is) the task of LIS professionals, above all subject specialist librarians. Evaluating the significance of a particular document – a journal article, blog, dataset, etc. – in this case by measuring the amount of attention it is receiving on a number of communication channels (or so-called “impact flavours” such as blog posts, mainstream news, Wikipedia articles, policy documents, discussions on social media, and so on), allows for a new perspective on the spread of information, one which promises an alternative, more nuanced picture of scholarly communication and (re)use to that of more traditional metrics focused on citations.*
By I Congresso Científico Brasileiro da Wikipédia discute pesquisa e disseminação de conteúdo | IBPAD on December 19, 2016 at 5:46 pm além de defensor de dados/acesso/projetos de sistemas abertos – também líder do altmetrics. Com a keynote “Open, collaborative, reproducible, research to support free knowledge”,ele
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By Altmetrics - Replacing the Impact Factor Is Not the Only Point - The Scholarly Kitchen on January 6, 2017 at 8:26 pm as a container is an important value metric and one that needs to continue, the rapidly evolving alternative metrics (altmetrics) movement is concerned with more than replacing traditional journalassessment
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By What are alternative metrics? | CEU Philosophy R&P LAB on January 13, 2017 at 11:42 am our view of what impact looks like, but also of what’s making the impact” (cited from Altmetrics Manifesto). They are calculated by projects like Impactstory and companies like Altmetric.com and Plum*
By Altmetrics: New ways of looking at attention and impact – In Your Library: Scholarly Communications at USC on February 2, 2017 at 8:34 pm formally introduced in 2010 with an online manifesto, are alternatives to the traditional measures of scholarly impact. They are meant to supplement,*
By Post-Publication Peer Review: What Value Do Usage-Based Metrics Offer? - The Scholarly Kitchen on February 12, 2017 at 3:36 pm leaves the search for new metrics (“altmetrics“) as perhaps the greatest hope for near-term improvement in our post-publication*
By Altmetrics and Research Assessment: How Not to Let History Repeat Itself - The Scholarly Kitchen on February 18, 2017 at 3:48 pm it in publishing circles. It certainly seems to have been met with less buzz than the now iconic altmetrics manifesto, which Jason Priem et al., published in 2010. As Cassidy Sugimoto (@csugimoto)pointed out in the
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By Can Open Access benefit your Career? – Access 2 Perspectives on March 5, 2017 at 12:33 pm makers, economists and the general public – who pays for large chunk of the conducted research. Alternative metrics (altmetrics) allow especially young scientists to build a reputation by countingthe numbers of
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By Water Underground | A social media dashboard for researchers – taming the digital anarchy for nerds on April 4, 2017 at 5:15 pm would be great to link all kinds of altmetrics with this simple, social professor dashboard. Altmetrics are alternative metrics to thewidely-used
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By #Mosomelt 2017 Week 6: “Developing Open Scholarship” – Mobile Social Media Learning Technologies on April 9, 2017 at 10:40 pm Priem, J, Taraborelli, D, Goth, P, & Neylon, C. (2010, 26 October). Altmetrics: A manifesto. Retrieved 19 June, 2015, from http://altmetrics.org/manifesto/*
By To get the grade: Collaborate! Stakeholder engagement and the missing link between research and action « IAN/EcoCheck Blog on April 12, 2017 at 2:56 pm is often reduced to a single number, such as the h-index. Alternative impact measures, so-called “altmetrics” have been suggested that give weight not only to citations, but also the sharingof datasets and
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By
いま話題の新しい論文評価指標「オルトメトリクス(Altmetrics)」 - 学術英語アカデミー on April 14, 2017 at 5:47am
学術論文の影響度を測る指標には、インパクトファクター(Impact Factor)やh指数(h-index)などが知られていますが、近年、「オルトメトリクス(Altmetrics)」という新しい論文評価指標が注目されています。オルトメトリクスは、論文の引用数を反映するだけでなく、論文の閲覧数、ダウンロード数、フェイスブックやツイッターなどソーシャルメディアや報道機関でのコメント数など、論文がもつ影響力のさまざまな面を反映しています。オルトメトリクスはインパクトファクターに取って代わることはできるのでしょうか? 専門家たちに聞いてみました。*
By Open Science versus Ash Dieback (and the Tweenome revisited) | on April 21, 2017 at 4:53 am such as citation. Working with DataCite we issued our first DOI for the E. coli genome, and the altmetrics community using tools such as Impact Story have shown it is also possible to track GitHub use*
By E-metrics op IFLA Congress 2013 – IP | vakblad voor informatieprofessionalson May
17, 2017 at 6:30 pm
perspectief werd geleverd door Jason Priem. Hij is een van de vier opstellers van het Altmetrics-manifest en promovendus in Library & Information Science aan de Universiteit van North Carolina in*
By The Future of Metrics in Science – UC3 Portal on June 14, 2017 at 7:24 pm a graduate student at UNC’s School of Information and Library Science, coined the term “altmetrics” rather recently, and the idea has taken off like*
By Metrics, Metrics, (Alt)metrics | The New West on June 16, 2017 at 9:05 pm Altmetrics Manifesto was a response to an academic environment in which (1) traditional metrics were under fire from*
By Ok historians, we need to talk about impact | Cap and Gown on June 27, 2017 at 5:48 am it seems the UK might now be revising their approach). Somewhere in the middle (perhaps) sit #altmetrics, which attempt to give a quantative measure of the quality and quantity of attention that aPOST A COMMENT
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* BARBATI on altmetrics: a manifesto * Ok historians, we need to talk about impact | Cap and Gown on altmetrics: a manifesto * Metrics, Metrics, (Alt)metrics | The New West on altmetrics: a manifesto * The Future of Metrics in Science – UC3 Portal on altmetrics: a manifesto * Impact Factors: A Broken System – UC3 Portalon Tools
* E-metrics op IFLA Congress 2013 – IP | vakblad voor informatieprofessionalson
altmetrics: a manifesto * Open Science versus Ash Dieback (and the Tweenome revisited) | on altmetrics: a manifesto*
いま話題の新しい論文評価指標「オルトメトリクス(Altmetrics)」 - 学術英語アカデミー on altmetrics: a manifesto * Trip Report: 5 years of altmetrics #2amconf #altmetrics15 – dfuture.bmj.com alpha siteon altmetrics15: 5
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