Journal of the Association for Information Science & Technology
1976 - 2025
From Association for Information Science & Technology Bibliographic data for series maintained by Wiley Content Delivery (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 67, issue 12, 2016
- The role of information in health behavior: A scoping study and discussion of major public health models pp. 2831-2841

- Devon L. Greyson and Joy L. Johnson
- Understanding the sustained use of online health communities from a self-determination perspective pp. 2842-2857

- Yan Zhang
- The effects of distraction on task completion scores in a natural environment test setting pp. 2858-2870

- Elke Greifeneder
- Teen online information disclosure: Empirical testing of a protection motivation and social capital model pp. 2871-2881

- Hongliang Chen, Christopher E. Beaudoin and Traci Hong
- Interfaces for accessing location-based information on mobile devices: An empirical evaluation pp. 2882-2896

- Dion Hoe-Lian Goh, Chei Sian Lee and Khasfariyati Razikin
- Success in online searches: Differences between evaluation and finding tasks pp. 2897-2908

- Werner Wirth, Katharina Sommer, Thilo Pape and Veronika Karnowski
- Enhancing information retrieval through concept-based language modeling and semantic smoothing pp. 2909-2927

- Lynda Said Lhadj, Mohand Boughanem and Karima Amrouche
- Information retrieval from historical newspaper collections in highly inflectional languages: A query expansion approach pp. 2928-2946

- Anni Järvelin, Heikki Keskustalo, Eero Sormunen, Miamaria Saastamoinen and Kimmo Kettunen
- Toward understanding short-term personal information preservation: A study of backup strategies of end users pp. 2947-2963

- Matjaž Kljun, John Mariani and Alan Dix
- Analyzing data citation practices using the data citation index pp. 2964-2975

- Nicolas Robinson-García, Evaristo Jiménez-Contreras and Daniel Torres-Salinas
- Distributed or concentrated research excellence? Evidence from a large-scale research assessment exercise pp. 2976-2992

- Andrea Bonaccorsi and Tindaro Cicero
- An automatic method for assessing the teaching impact of books from online academic syllabi pp. 2993-3007

- Kayvan Kousha and Mike Thelwall
- The effects of research level and article type on the differences between citation metrics and F1000 recommendations pp. 3008-3021

- Jian Du, Xiaoli Tang and Yishan Wu
- Booklovers' world: An examination of factors affecting continued usage of social cataloging sites pp. 3022-3035

- Namjoo Choi and Soohyung Joo
- Mendeley readership counts: An investigation of temporal and disciplinary differences pp. 3036-3050

- Mike Thelwall and Pardeep Sud
- Scientific research measures pp. 3051-3063

- Marco Frittelli, Loriano Mancini and Ilaria Peri
- Overlay maps based on Mendeley data: The use of altmetrics for readership networks pp. 3064-3072

- Lutz Bornmann and Robin Haunschild
- Leveraging metadata to recommend keywords for academic papers pp. 3073-3091

- Ido Blank, Lior Rokach and Guy Shani
- Citation data as a proxy for quality or scientific influence are at best PAC (probably approximately correct) pp. 3092-3094

- Ronald Rousseau
- Highly cited papers in Library and Information Science (LIS): Authors, institutions, and network structures pp. 3095-3100

- Johann Bauer, Loet Leydesdorff and Lutz Bornmann
Volume 67, issue 11, 2016
- Chatting through pictures? A classification of images tweeted in one week in the UK and USA pp. 2575-2586

- Mike Thelwall, Olga Goriunova, Farida Vis, Simon Faulkner, Anne Burns, Jim Aulich, Amalia Mas-Bleda, Emma Stuart and Francesco D'Orazio
- The effect of personalization provider characteristics on privacy attitudes and behaviors: An Elaboration Likelihood Model approach pp. 2587-2606

- Alfred Kobsa, Hichang Cho and Bart P. Knijnenburg
- Understanding eye movements on mobile devices for better presentation of search results pp. 2607-2619

- Jaewon Kim, Paul Thomas, Ramesh Sankaranarayana, Tom Gedeon and Hwan-Jin Yoon
- Assessing geographic relevance for mobile search: A computational model and its validation via crowdsourcing pp. 2620-2634

- Tumasch Reichenbacher, Stefano De Sabbata, Ross S. Purves and Sara I. Fabrikant
- Is exploratory search different? A comparison of information search behavior for exploratory and lookup tasks pp. 2635-2651

- Kumaripaba Athukorala, Dorota Głowacka, Giulio Jacucci, Antti Oulasvirta and Jilles Vreeken
- Predicting information searchers' topic knowledge at different search stages pp. 2652-2666

- Jingjing Liu, Chang Liu and Nicholas J. Belkin
- Automated arabic text classification with P-Stemmer, machine learning, and a tailored news article taxonomy pp. 2667-2683

- Tarek Kanan and Edward A. Fox
- Predicting the impact of scientific concepts using full-text features pp. 2684-2696

- Kathy McKeown, Hal Daume, Snigdha Chaturvedi, John Paparrizos, Kapil Thadani, Pablo Barrio, Or Biran, Suvarna Bothe, Michael Collins, Kenneth R. Fleischmann, Luis Gravano, Rahul Jha, Ben King, Kevin McInerney, Taesun Moon, Arvind Neelakantan, Diarmuid O'Seaghdha, Dragomir Radev, Clay Templeton and Simone Teufel
- Liberating interdisciplinarity from myth. An exploration of the discursive construction of identities in information studies pp. 2697-2709

- Dorte Madsen
- Towards an understanding of the relationship between disciplinary research cultures and open access repository behaviors pp. 2710-2724

- Jenny Fry, Valérie Spezi, Stephen Probets and Claire Creaser
- Identification of nonliteral language in social media: A case study on sarcasm pp. 2725-2737

- Smaranda Muresan, Roberto Gonzalez-Ibanez, Debanjan Ghosh and Nina Wacholder
- Form-ing institutional order: The scaffolding of lists and identifiers pp. 2738-2753

- Paul Beynon-Davies
- Herd behavior in consumers’ adoption of online reviews pp. 2754-2765

- Xiao-Liang Shen, Kem Z.K. Zhang and Sesia J. Zhao
- Citation analysis as a literature search method for systematic reviews pp. 2766-2777

- Christopher W. Belter
- The application of bibliometrics to research evaluation in the humanities and social sciences: An exploratory study using normalized Google Scholar data for the publications of a research institute pp. 2778-2789

- Lutz Bornmann, Andreas Thor, Werner Marx and Hermann Schier
- University citation distributions pp. 2790-2804

- Antonio Perianes-Rodriguez and Javier Ruiz-Castillo
- The normalization of occurrence and Co-occurrence matrices in bibliometrics using Cosine similarities and Ochiai coefficients pp. 2805-2814

- Qiuju Zhou and Loet Leydesdorff
- Estimating open access mandate effectiveness: The MELIBEA score pp. 2815-2828

- Philippe Vincent-Lamarre, Jade Boivin, Yassine Gargouri, Vincent Larivière and Stevan Harnad
Volume 67, issue 10, 2016
- Data science on the ground: Hype, criticism, and everyday work pp. 2309-2319

- Daniel Carter and Dan Sholler
- Do autocomplete functions reduce the impact of dyslexia on information-searching behavior? The case of Google pp. 2320-2328

- Gerd Berget and Frode Eika Sandnes
- Sharing “happy” information pp. 2329-2343

- Fiona Tinto and Ian Ruthven
- Trustworthiness and authority of scholarly information in a digital age: Results of an international questionnaire pp. 2344-2361

- Carol Tenopir, Kenneth Levine, Suzie Allard, Lisa Christian, Rachel Volentine, Reid Boehm, Frances Nichols, David Nicholas, Hamid R. Jamali, Eti Herman and Anthony Watkinson
- Motivation to share knowledge using wiki technology and the moderating effect of role perceptions pp. 2362-2378

- Ofer Arazy, Ian Gellatly, Esther Brainin and Oded Nov
- How to improve the sustainability of digital libraries and information Services? pp. 2379-2391

- Gobiinda G. Chowdhury
- Data sharing for the advancement of science: Overcoming barriers for citizen scientists pp. 2392-2403

- Kirsty Williamson, Mary Anne Kennan, Graeme Johanson and John Weckert
- Multiple viewpoints increase students' attention to source features in social question and answer forum messages pp. 2404-2419

- Ladislao Salmerón, Mônica Macedo-Rouet and Jean-François Rouet
- Development, testing, and validation of an information literacy test (ILT) for higher education pp. 2420-2436

- Bojana Boh Podgornik, Danica Dolničar, Andrej Šorgo and Tomaž Bartol
- Sentence simplification, compression, and disaggregation for summarization of sophisticated documents pp. 2437-2453

- Catherine Finegan-Dollak and Dragomir R. Radev
- Fuzzy retrieval for software reuse pp. 2454-2463

- Erin Colvin and Donald H. Kraft
- Map of science with topic modeling: Comparison of unsupervised learning and human-assigned subject classification pp. 2464-2476

- Arho Suominen and Hannes Toivanen
- Visualizing the world's scientific publications pp. 2477-2488

- Rex H.-G. Chen and Chi-Ming Chen
- The effects of research resources on international collaboration in the astronomy community pp. 2489-2510

- Han-Wen Chang and Mu-Hsuan Huang
- Comparing and combining Content- and Citation-based approaches for plagiarism detection pp. 2511-2526

- Solange de L. Pertile, Viviane P. Moreira and Paolo Rosso
- Robustness of journal rankings by network flows with different amounts of memory pp. 2527-2535

- Ludvig Bohlin, Alcides Viamontes Esquivel, Andrea Lancichinetti and Martin Rosvall
- Author practices in citing other authors, institutions, and journals pp. 2536-2549

- Ali Gazni and Zahra Ghaseminik
- Evaluation of the citation matching algorithms of CWTS and iFQ in comparison to the Web of science pp. 2550-2564

- Marlies Olensky, Marion Schmidt and Nees Jan Eck
- The power–law relationship between citation-based performance and collaboration in articles in management journals: A scale-independent approach pp. 2565-2572

- Guillermo Armando Ronda-Pupo and J. Sylvan Katz
Volume 67, issue 9, 2016
- The sharing economy: Why people participate in collaborative consumption pp. 2047-2059

- Juho Hamari, Mimmi Sjöklint and Antti Ukkonen
- The quality versus accessibility debate revisited: A contingency perspective on human information source selection pp. 2060-2071

- Lilian Woudstra, Bart Hooff and Alexander Schouten
- Uncovering social semantics from textual traces: A theory-driven approach and evidence from public statements of U.S. Members of Congress pp. 2072-2089

- Yu-Ru Lin, Drew Margolin and David Lazer
- Seeing is believing (or at least changing your mind): The influence of visibility and task complexity on preference changes in computer-supported team decision making pp. 2090-2104

- Babajide Osatuyi, Starr Roxanne Hiltz and Katia Passerini
- Information seeking for musical creativity: A systematic literature review pp. 2105-2117

- Charilaos Lavranos, Petros Kostagiolas, Nikolaos Korfiatis and Joseph Papadatos
- A machine-learning approach to negation and speculation detection for sentiment analysis pp. 2118-2136

- Noa P. Cruz, Maite Taboada and Ruslan Mitkov
- Software in the scientific literature: Problems with seeing, finding, and using software mentioned in the biology literature pp. 2137-2155

- James Howison and Julia Bullard
- Thesaurus structure, descriptive parameters, and scale pp. 2156-2165

- Robert Losee
- Optimization of the subject directory in a government agriculture department web portal pp. 2166-2180

- Jin Zhang, Shanshan Zhai, Jennifer Ann Stevenson and Lixin Xia
- The construction of interdisciplinarity: The development of the knowledge base and programmatic focus of the journal Climatic Change, 1977–2013 pp. 2181-2193

- Iina Hellsten and Loet Leydesdorff
- Aggregated journal–journal citation relations in scopus and web of science matched and compared in terms of networks, maps, and interactive overlays pp. 2194-2211

- Loet Leydesdorff, Félix Moya-Anegón and Wouter Nooy
- Nobel numbers: Time-dependent centrality measures on coauthorship graphs pp. 2212-2222

- Chris Fields
- Disciplinary knowledge production and diffusion in science pp. 2223-2245

- Erjia Yan
- Information inequality in contemporary Chinese urban society: The results of a cluster analysis pp. 2246-2262

- Liangzhi Yu and Wenjie Zhou
- Modeling journal bibliometrics to predict downloads and inform purchase decisions at university research libraries pp. 2263-2273

- Daniel M. Coughlin and Bernard J. Jansen
- How much does the expected number of citations for a publication change if it contains the address of a specific scientific institute? A new approach for the analysis of citation data on the institutional level based on regression models pp. 2274-2282

- Lutz Bornmann
- Business process costs of implementing “gold” and “green” open access in institutional and national contexts pp. 2283-2295

- Robert Johnson, Stephen Pinfield and Mattia Fosci
- Spatial mediations in historical understanding: GIS and epistemic practices of history pp. 2296-2306

- Venkata Ratnadeep Suri and Hamid R. Ekbia
Volume 67, issue 8, 2016
- Social media and problematic everyday life information-seeking outcomes: Differences across use frequency, gender, and problem-solving styles pp. 1793-1807

- Sei-Ching Joanna Sin
- A content analysis of Twitter hyperlinks and their application in web resource indexing pp. 1808-1821

- Kwan Yi, Namjoo Choi and Yung Soo Kim
- Reducing digital divide effects through student engagement in coordinated game design, online resource use, and social computing activities in school pp. 1822-1835

- Rebecca Reynolds and Ming Ming Chiu
- Understanding scientific collaboration in the research life cycle: Bio- and nanoscientists' motivations, information-sharing and communication practices, and barriers to collaboration pp. 1836-1848

- EunKyung Chung, Nahyun Kwon and Jungyeoun Lee
- Not all international collaboration is beneficial: The Mendeley readership and citation impact of biochemical research collaboration pp. 1849-1857

- Pardeep Sud and Mike Thelwall
- Text representation strategies: An example with the State of the union addresses pp. 1858-1870

- Jacques Savoy
- Why experience matters to privacy: How context-based experience moderates consumer privacy expectations for mobile applications pp. 1871-1882

- Kirsten Martin and Katie Shilton
- Academics' responses to encountered information: Context matters pp. 1883-1903

- Sheila Pontis, Genovefa Kefalidou, Ann Blandford, Jamie Forth, Stephann Makri, Sarah Sharples, Geraint Wiggins and Mel Woods
- Using the wayback machine to mine websites in the social sciences: A methodological resource pp. 1904-1915

- Sanjay K. Arora, Yin Li, Jan Youtie and Philip Shapira
- Web mining for navigation problem detection and diagnosis in Discapnet: A website aimed at disabled people pp. 1916-1927

- Olatz Arbelaitz, Aizea Lojo, Javier Muguerza and Iñigo Perona
- Information flows as bases for archeology-specific geodata infrastructures: An exploratory study in flanders pp. 1928-1942

- Berdien De Roo, Philippe De Maeyer and Jean Bourgeois
- Using path-based approaches to examine the dynamic structure of discipline-level citation networks: 1997–2011 pp. 1943-1955

- Erjia Yan and Qi Yu
- Wikipedia, collective memory, and the Vietnam war pp. 1956-1961

- Brendan Luyt
- Mendeley readership altmetrics for medical articles: An analysis of 45 fields pp. 1962-1972

- Mike Thelwall and Paul Wilson
- Author credit-assignment schemas: A comparison and analysis pp. 1973-1989

- Jian Xu, Ying Ding, Min Song and Tamy Chambers
- Research synthesis methods and library and information science: Shared problems, limited diffusion pp. 1990-2008

- Laura Sheble
- Spamming in scholarly publishing: A case study pp. 2009-2015

- Marcin Kozak, Olesia Iefremova and James Hartley
- Constructing conceptual trajectory maps to trace the development of research fields pp. 2016-2031

- Yi-Ning Tu and Shu-Lan Hsu
- A mixture model of global internet capacity distributions pp. 2032-2044

- Hyunjin Seo and Stuart Thorson
Volume 67, issue 7, 2016
- Teaching with Wikipedia in a 21-super-st-century classroom: Perceptions of Wikipedia and its educational benefits pp. 1523-1534

- Piotr Konieczny
- Media studies research in the data-driven age: How research questions evolve pp. 1535-1554

- Marc Bron, Jasmijn Van Gorp and Maarten Rijke
- Testing a model of user-experience with news websites pp. 1555-1575

- Gabor Aranyi and Paul Schaik
- Sentiment-based event detection in Twitter pp. 1576-1587

- Georgios Paltoglou
- Social-media-based public policy informatics: Sentiment and network analyses of U.S. Immigration and border security pp. 1588-1606

- Wingyan Chung and Daniel Zeng
- Rain or shine? Forecasting search process performance in exploratory search tasks pp. 1607-1623

- Chirag Shah, Chathra Hendahewa and Roberto González-Ibáñez
- Why are these similar? Investigating item similarity types in a large digital library pp. 1624-1638

- Aitor Gonzalez-Agirre, German Rigau, Eneko Agirre, Nikolaos Aletras and Mark Stevenson
- A quantitative analysis of the temporal effects on automatic text classification pp. 1639-1667

- Thiago Salles, Leonardo Rocha, Marcos André Gonçalves, Jussara M. Almeida, Fernando Mourão, Wagner Meira and Felipe Viegas
- The linguistic construal of disciplinarity: A data-mining approach using register features pp. 1668-1678

- Elke Teich, Stefania Degaetano-Ortlieb, Peter Fankhauser, Hannah Kermes and Ekaterina Lapshinova-Koltunski
- Exploiting heterogeneous scientific literature networks to combat ranking bias: Evidence from the computational linguistics area pp. 1679-1702

- Xiaorui Jiang, Xiaoping Sun, Zhe Yang, Hai Zhuge and Jianmin Yao
- Genetic algorithms and Gaussian Bayesian networks to uncover the predictive core set of bibliometric indices pp. 1703-1721

- Alfonso Ibáñez, Rubén Armañanzas, Concha Bielza and Pedro Larrañaga
- Recovering uncaptured citations in a scholarly network: A two-step citation analysis to estimate publication importance pp. 1722-1735

- Zhuoren Jiang, Xiaozhong Liu and Yan Chen
- Indexing by Latent Dirichlet Allocation and an Ensemble Model pp. 1736-1750

- Yanshan Wang, Jae-Sung Lee and In-Chan Choi
- The “total cost of publication” in a hybrid open-access environment: Institutional approaches to funding journal article-processing charges in combination with subscriptions pp. 1751-1766

- Stephen Pinfield, Jennifer Salter and Peter A. Bath
- Health information technologies: From hazardous to the dark side pp. 1767-1772

- Carol Saunders, Anne F. Rutkowski, Jon Pluyter and Ronald Spanjers
- Bridging the gap between wikipedia and academia pp. 1773-1776

- Dariusz Jemielniak and Eduard Aibar
- Replicability and the public/private divide pp. 1777-1778

- Loet Leydesdorff, Caroline Wagner and Lutz Bornmann
- Correct assumptions? pp. 1779-1779

- Peter van den Besselaar
- Beyond Bibliometrics: Harnessing Multidimensional Indicators of Scholarly Intent edited by Blaise Cronin and Cassidy R. Sugimoto. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2014. 466 pp. $37.00. (Paperback). (ISBN: 9780262525510 ) pp. 1780-1783

- Daniel O'Connor
- Indexing It All: The [Subject] in the Age of Documentation, Information, and Data. Ronald E. Day. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2014. 184 pp. $30 (hardcover). (ISBN 9780262028219) pp. 1784-1786

- Hope A. Olson
- Turing: Pioneer of the Information Age. Jack Copeland. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013. 224 pp. $17.95 (paperback). (ISBN 9780198719182) pp. 1787-1789

- Thomas Haigh
Volume 67, issue 6, 2016
- The conditions of peak empiricism in big data and interaction design pp. 1279-1288

- Michael Marcinkowski and Fred Fonseca
- Tweet-biased summarization pp. 1289-1300

- Evi Yulianti, Sharin Huspi and Mark Sanderson
- Users' music information needs and behaviors: Design implications for music information retrieval systems pp. 1301-1330

- Jin Ha Lee, Hyerim Cho and Yea-Seul Kim
- Understanding collaborative search for places of interest pp. 1331-1344

- Misfer Aldosari, Mark Sanderson, Audrey Tam and Alexandra L. Uitdenbogerd
- Assessment of learning to rank methods for query expansion pp. 1345-1357

- Bo Xu, Hongfei Lin and Yuan Lin
- What motivates people to review articles? The case of the human-computer interaction community pp. 1358-1371

- Syavash Nobarany, Kellogg S. Booth and Gary Hsieh
- The decision to submit to a journal: Another example of a valence-consistent Shift? pp. 1372-1383

- Guido Pepermans and Sandra Rousseau
- The boundaries between: Parental involvement in a teen's online world pp. 1384-1403

- Lee B. Erickson, Pamela Wisniewski, Heng Xu, John M. Carroll, Mary Beth Rosson and Daniel F. Perkins
- Social scientists' satisfaction with data reuse pp. 1404-1416

- Ixchel M. Faniel, Adam Kriesberg and Elizabeth Yakel
- Investment decision paths in the information age: The effect of online journalism pp. 1417-1429

- Michal Gaziel Yablowitz and Daphne R. Raban
- The development and validation of a one-bit comparison for evaluating the maturity of tag distributions in a Web 2.0 environment pp. 1430-1445

- Kuo-Hao Tang, Li-Chen Tsai and Sheue-Ling Hwang
- Distortive effects of initial-based name disambiguation on measurements of large-scale coauthorship networks pp. 1446-1461

- Jinseok Kim and Jana Diesner
- Estimating the probability of an authorship attribution pp. 1462-1472

- Jacques Savoy
- Science communication and dissemination in different cultures: An analysis of the audience for TED videos in China and abroad pp. 1473-1486

- Xuelian Pan, Erjia Yan and Weina Hua
- Disciplinary, national, and departmental contributions to the literature of library and information science, 2007–2012 pp. 1487-1506

- William H. Walters and Esther Isabelle Wilder
- Accessibility of graphics in STEM research articles: Analysis and proposals for improvement pp. 1507-1520

- Bruno Splendiani and Mireia Ribera
Volume 67, issue 5, 2016
- Personalized generation of word clouds from tweets pp. 1021-1032

- Martin Leginus, ChengXiang Zhai and Peter Dolog
- Blocked: When the information is hidden by the visualization pp. 1033-1051

- Kyong Eun Oh, Daniel Halpern, Marilyn Tremaine, James Chiang, Deborah Silver and Karen Bemis
- On online collaboration and construction of shared knowledge: Assessing mediation capability in computer supported argument visualization tools pp. 1052-1067

- Luca Iandoli, Ivana Quinto, Anna De Liddo and Simon Buckingham Shum
- Social network analysis on a topic‐based navigation guidance system in a public health portal pp. 1068-1088

- Jin Zhang, Shanshan Zhai, Hongxia Liu and Jennifer Ann Stevenson
- Characteristics of tagging behavior in digitized humanities online collections pp. 1089-1104

- Youngok Choi and Sue Yeon Syn
- Uncovering information from social media hyperlinks: An investigation of twitter pp. 1105-1120

- Liwen Vaughan
- How users employ various popular tags to annotate resources in social tagging: An empirical study pp. 1121-1137

- Xuwei Pan, Shenglan He, Xiyong Zhu and Qingmiao Fu
- A knowledge‐based approach to Information Extraction for semantic interoperability in the archaeology domain pp. 1138-1152

- Andreas Vlachidis and Douglas Tudhope
- Shaping guanxi networks at work through instant messaging pp. 1153-1168

- Carol X. J. Ou and Robert M. Davison
- Intuitive or idiomatic: An interdisciplinary study of child‐tablet computer interaction pp. 1169-1181

- Rhonda McEwen and Adam K. Dubé
- User motivations for asking questions in online Q&A services pp. 1182-1197

- Erik Choi and Chirag Shah
- Can Mendeley bookmarks reflect readership? A survey of user motivations pp. 1198-1209

- Ehsan Mohammadi, Mike Thelwall and Kayvan Kousha
- Theory‐changing breakthroughs in science: The impact of research teamwork on scientific discoveries pp. 1210-1223

- Jos J. Winnink, Robert J. W. Tijssen and Anthony F. J. van Raan
- Factors that influence the teaching use of Wikipedia in higher education pp. 1224-1232

- Antoni Meseguer‐Artola, Eduard Aibar, Josep Lladós, Julià Minguillón and Maura Lerga
- Does research with statistics have more impact? The citation rank advantage of structural equation modeling pp. 1233-1244

- Mike Thelwall and Paul Wilson
- The scientific impact of mexican steroid research 1935–1965: A bibliometric and historiographic analysis pp. 1245-1256

- Yoscelina I. Hernandez‐Garcia, José Antonio Chamizo, Mina Kleiche‐Dray and Jane M. Russell
- Diversity of references as an indicator of the interdisciplinarity of journals: Taking similarity between subject fields into account pp. 1257-1265

- Lin Zhang, Ronald Rousseau and Wolfgang Glänzel
- Data, ideology, and the developing critical program of social informatics pp. 1266-1275

- Michael Marcinkowski
Volume 67, issue 4, 2016
- Measuring compliance with a Spanish Government open access mandate pp. 757-764

- Ángel Borrego
- A relational altmetric? Network centrality on ResearchGate as an indicator of scientific impact pp. 765-775

- Christian Pieter Hoffmann, Christoph Lutz and Miriam Meckel
- Institutional and individual factors affecting scientists' data-sharing behaviors: A multilevel analysis pp. 776-799

- Youngseek Kim and Jeffrey M. Stanton
- User experience with commercial music services: An empirical exploration pp. 800-811

- Jin Ha Lee and Rachel Price
- Personal communication networks and their positive effects on online collaboration and outcome quality on Wikipedia pp. 812-823

- Michail Tsikerdekis
- Exploring information interactions in the context of Google pp. 824-840

- Frances Johnson, Jennifer Rowley and Laura Sbaffi
- Understanding “influence”: An empirical test of the Data-Frame Theory of Sensemaking pp. 841-858

- Sheila Pontis and Ann Blandford
- Digital innovations in poetry: Practices of creative writing faculty in online literary publishing pp. 859-873

- Rachel A. Fleming-May and Harriett Green
- Bibliogifts in LibGen? A study of a text-sharing platform driven by biblioleaks and crowdsourcing pp. 874-884

- Guillaume Cabanac
- Linking and clustering artworks using social tags: Revitalizing crowd-sourced information on cultural collections pp. 885-899

- Gunho Chae, Jaram Park, Juyong Park, Woon Seung Yeo and Chungkon Shi
- The Text Matrix as a tool to increase the cohesion of extensive texts pp. 900-914

- José Osvaldo De Sordi, Manuel Meireles and Osvaldo Luiz Oliveira
- Discovering hierarchical topic evolution in time-stamped documents pp. 915-927

- Jun Song, Yu Huang, Xiang Qi, Yuheng Li, Feng Li, Kun Fu and Tinglei Huang
- Indexing biomedical documents with a possibilistic network pp. 928-941

- Wiem Chebil, Lina Fatima Soualmia, Mohamed Nazih Omri and Stéfan Jacques Darmoni
- A learning to rank approach for quality-aware pseudo-relevance feedback pp. 942-959

- Zheng Ye and Jimmy Xiangji Huang
- Guideline references and academic citations as evidence of the clinical value of health research pp. 960-966

- Mike Thelwall and Nabeil Maflahi
- Comparing keywords plus of WOS and author keywords: A case study of patient adherence research pp. 967-972

- Juan Zhang, Qi Yu, Fashan Zheng, Chao Long, Zuxun Lu and Zhiguang Duan
- Research data and metadata curation as institutional issues pp. 973-993

- Matthew S. Mayernik
- Interacting with archival finding aids pp. 994-1008

- Luanne Freund and Elaine G. Toms
- Does international collaboration yield a higher citation potential for US scientists publishing in highly visible interdisciplinary Journals? pp. 1009-1013

- Ronald Rousseau and Jielan Ding
- The time for bibliometric applications pp. 1014-1015

- Daniel Torres-Salinas and Nicolás Robinson-García
- What do altmetrics counts mean? A plea for content analyses pp. 1016-1017

- Lutz Bornmann
Volume 67, issue 3, 2016
- Professional information disclosure on social networks: The case of Facebook and LinkedIn in Israel pp. 493-504

- Maayan Zhitomirsky-Geffet and Yair Bratspiess
- A conceptual model for video games and interactive media pp. 505-517

- Jacob Jett, Simone Sacchi, Jin Ha Lee and Rachel Ivy Clarke
- A web analytics approach for appraising electronic resources in academic libraries pp. 518-534

- Daniel M. Coughlin, Mark C. Campbell and Bernard J. Jansen
- Costly collaborations: The impact of scientific fraud on co-authors' careers pp. 535-542

- Philippe Mongeon and Vincent Larivière
- Contributions of chinese authors in PLOS ONE pp. 543-549

- Sulan Yan, Ronald Rousseau and Shuiqing Huang
- A readability level prediction tool for K-12 books pp. 550-565

- Joel Denning, Maria Soledad Pera and Yiu-Kai Ng
- Can Amazon.com reviews help to assess the wider impacts of books? pp. 566-581

- Kayvan Kousha and Mike Thelwall
- A context-dependent relevance model pp. 582-593

- Edward Kai Fung Dang, Robert W.P. Luk and James Allan
- An ontology-based model for indexing and retrieval pp. 594-609

- Winfried Gödert
- The congruity between linkage-based factors and content-based clusters—an experimental study using multiple document corpora pp. 610-619

- Tsung Teng Chen
- The twist measure for IR evaluation: Taking user's effort into account pp. 620-648

- Nicola Ferro, Gianmaria Silvello, Heikki Keskustalo, Ari Pirkola and Kalervo Järvelin
- What's the use? Measuring the frequency of studies of information outcomes pp. 649-661

- Donald O. Case and Lisa G. O'Connor
- Enhanced self-citation detection by fuzzy author name matching and complementary error estimates pp. 662-670

- Paul Donner
- Dimensions and uncertainties of author citation rankings: Lessons learned from frequency-weighted in-text citation counting pp. 671-682

- Dangzhi Zhao and Andreas Strotmann
- A bibliometric and network analysis of the field of computational linguistics pp. 683-706

- Dragomir R. Radev, Mark Thomas Joseph, Bryan Gibson and Pradeep Muthukrishnan
- The operationalization of “fields” as WoS subject categories (WCs) in evaluative bibliometrics: The cases of “library and information science” and “science & technology studies” pp. 707-714

- Loet Leydesdorff and Lutz Bornmann
- The impact of research funding on scientific outputs: Evidence from six smaller European countries pp. 715-730

- Abdullah Gök, John Rigby and Philip Shapira
- Research assessment based on infrequent achievements: A comparison of the United States and Europe in terms of highly cited papers and Nobel Prizes pp. 731-740

- Alonso Rodríguez-Navarro
- Journal portfolio analysis for countries, cities, and organizations: Maps and comparisons pp. 741-748

- Loet Leydesdorff, Gaston Heimeriks and Daniele Rotolo
- Handbook of Information Science by Wolfgang G. Stock, and Mechtild Stock. Berlin, Germany, de Gruyter Saur, 2013. 901 pp. $210.00. (hardcover). (ISBN: 978-3-11-023500-5 ) pp. 749-750

- Tefko Saracevic
- Big Data, Little Data, No Data: Scholarship in the Networked World by Christine L. Borgman. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2015. 400 pp. $32 (hardcover). (ISBN 9780262028561 ) pp. 751-753

- Carol Tenopir
Volume 67, issue 2, 2016
- Perceptions of presidential candidates' personalities in twitter pp. 249-267

- Sanmitra Bhattacharya, Chao Yang, Padmini Srinivasan and Bob Boynton
- Rockin' robins: Do congresswomen rule the roost in the Twittersphere? pp. 268-275

- Heather K. Evans, Joycelyn Ovalle and Stephen Green
- Identifying the role of individual user messages in an online discussion and its use in thread retrieval pp. 276-288

- Sumit Bhatia, Prakhar Biyani and Prasenjit Mitra
- Question types and intermediary elicitations pp. 289-304

- David Bodoff and Daphne Raban
- User modeling in a social network for cognitively disabled people pp. 305-317

- Olatz Arbelaitz, José María Martínez-Otzeta and Javier Muguerza
- Physicians' learning at work through everyday access to information pp. 318-332

- Esther Ebole Isah and Katriina Byström
- Comparison of drug information on consumer drug review sites versus authoritative health information websites pp. 333-349

- Shu Wen Chew and Christopher S.G. Khoo
- Content-based image retrieval methods and professional image users pp. 350-365

- Joan E. Beaudoin
- Generic speech summarization of transcribed lecture videos: Using tags and their semantic relations pp. 366-379

- Hyun Hee Kim and Yong Ho Kim
- litewi: A combined term extraction and entity linking method for eliciting educational ontologies from textbooks pp. 380-399

- Angel Conde, Mikel Larrañaga, Ana Arruarte, Jon A. Elorriaga and Dan Roth
- An improved algorithm for unsupervised decomposition of a multi-author document pp. 400-411

- Chris Giannella
- On full text download and citation distributions in scientific-scholarly journals pp. 412-431

- Henk F. Moed and Gali Halevi
- Sleeping beauties in genius work: When were they awakened? pp. 432-440

- Jiang Li and Dongbo Shi
- The evolution of stakeholders' perceptions of disaster: A model of information flow pp. 441-453

- Jiuchang Wei, Fei Wang and Michael K. Lindell
- The three dimensions of website navigability: Explication and effects pp. 454-464

- Bartosz W. Wojdynski and Sriram Kalyanaraman
- A new approach for main path analysis: Decay in knowledge diffusion pp. 465-476

- John S. Liu and Chung-Huei Kuan
- URL decay at year 20: A research note pp. 477-479

- Fatih Oguz and Wallace Koehler
- ARWU ranking uncertainty and sensitivity: What if the award factor was Excluded? pp. 480-482

- Milan Dobrota and Marina Dobrota
- Using targeted design interventions to encourage extra-role crowdsourcing behavior pp. 483-489

- Oded Nov, Jeffrey Laut and Maurizio Porfiri
- Mental models may fail when faced with self-referential descriptors pp. 490-490

- Alexandre de Castro
Volume 67, issue 1, 2016
- A framework for evaluating automatic indexing or classification in the context of retrieval pp. 3-16

- Koraljka Golub, Dagobert Soergel, George Buchanan, Douglas Tudhope, Marianne Lykke and Debra Hiom
- Classifying Twitter favorites: Like, bookmark, or Thanks? pp. 17-25

- Genevieve Gorrell and Kalina Bontcheva
- Personal information concerns and provision in social network sites: Interplay between secure preservation and true presentation pp. 26-42

- Jinyoung Min
- An exploratory study of the information-seeking activities of adolescents in a discussion forum pp. 43-55

- Nadia Gauducheau
- User satisfaction with microblogging: Information dissemination versus social networking pp. 56-70

- Ivy L.B. Liu, Christy M.K. Cheung and Matthew K.O. Lee
- SemGraph: Extracting keyphrases following a novel semantic graph-based approach pp. 71-82

- Juan Martinez-Romo, Lourdes Araujo and Andres Duque Fernandez
- On cold start for associative tag recommendation pp. 83-105

- Eder F. Martins, Fabiano M. Belém, Jussara M. Almeida and Marcos A. Gonçalves
- Descriptive document clustering via discriminant learning in a co-embedded space of multilevel similarities pp. 106-133

- Tingting Mu, John Y. Goulermas, Ioannis Korkontzelos and Sophia Ananiadou
- Extending the understanding of critical success factors for implementing business intelligence systems pp. 134-147

- William Yeoh and Aleš Popovič
- C-sanitized: A privacy model for document redaction and sanitization pp. 148-163

- David Sánchez and Montserrat Batet
- The invariant distribution of references in scientific articles pp. 164-177

- Marc Bertin, Iana Atanassova, Yves Gingras and Vincent Larivière
- Updating the SCImago journal and country rank classification: A new approach using Ward's clustering and alternative combination of citation measures pp. 178-190

- Antonio J. Gómez-Núñez, Benjamín Vargas-Quesada and Félix Moya-Anegón
- When are readership counts as useful as citation counts? Scopus versus Mendeley for LIS journals pp. 191-199

- Nabeil Maflahi and Mike Thelwall
- A new approach to the QS university ranking using the composite I-distance indicator: Uncertainty and sensitivity analyses pp. 200-211

- Marina Dobrota, Milica Bulajic, Lutz Bornmann and Veljko Jeremic
- Explaining the unexpected and continued use of an information system with the help of evolved evolutionary mechanisms pp. 212-231

- Chon Abraham, Iris Junglas, Richard T. Watson and Marie-Claude Boudreau
- Tweets as impact indicators: Examining the implications of automated “bot” accounts on Twitter pp. 232-238

- Stefanie Haustein, Timothy D. Bowman, Kim Holmberg, Andrew Tsou, Cassidy R. Sugimoto and Vincent Larivière
- Computational authorship verification method attributes a new work to a major 2nd century African author pp. 239-242

- Justin Anthony Stover, Yaron Winter, Moshe Koppel and Mike Kestemont
- The Importance of the Anonymous Voice in Postpublication Peer Review pp. 243-243

- Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva
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