个人信息Personal Information
副教授
硕士生导师
主要任职:高等教育研究院副院长
其他任职:学科评价中心 副主任
性别:男
毕业院校:大连理工大学
学位:博士
所在单位:高等教育研究院
学科:高等教育学
办公地点:大连理工大学 厚民楼407
联系方式:liushengbo1121@dlut.edu.cn 0411-84706330
电子邮箱:liushengbo@dlut.edu.cn
The proximity of co-citation
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论文类型:期刊论文
发表时间:2012-05-01
发表刊物:13th International Conference on Scientometrics and Informetrics
收录刊物:SCIE、CPCI-S、CPCI-SSH、SSCI、Scopus
卷号:91
期号:2
页面范围:495-511
ISSN号:0138-9130
关键字:Co-citation proximity; Co-citation analysis; Citation contextual; PubMed Central
摘要:Traditional co-citation analysis has not taken the proximity of co-cited references into account. As long as two references are cited by the same article, they are retreated equally regardless the distance between where citations appear in the article. Little is known about what additional insights into citation and co-citation behaviours one might gain from studying distributions of co-citation in terms of such proximity. How are citations distributed in an article? What insights does the proximity of co-citation provide? In this article, the proximity of a pair of co-cited reference is defined as the nearest instance of the co-citation relation in text. We investigate the proximity of co-citation in full text of scientific publications at four levels, namely, the sentence level, the paragraph level, the section level, and the article level. We conducted four studies of co-citation patterns in the full text of articles published in 22 open access journals from BioMed Central. First, we compared the distributions of co-citation instances at four proximity levels in journal articles to the traditional article-level co-citation counts. Second, we studied the distributions of co-citations of various proximities across organizational sections in articles. Third, the distribution of co-citation proximity in different co-citation frequency groups is investigated. Fourth, we identified the occurrences of co-citations at different proximity levels with reference to the corresponding traditional co-citation network. The results show that (1) the majority of co-citations are loosely coupled at the article level, (2) a higher proportion of sentence-level co-citations is found in high co-citation frequencies than in low co-citation frequencies, (3) tightly coupled sentence-level co-citations not only preserve the essential structure of the corresponding traditional co-citation network but also form a much smaller subset of the entire co-citation instances typically considered by traditional co-citation analysis. Implications for improving our understanding of underlying factors concerning co-citations and developing more efficient co-citation analysis methods are discussed.