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A bibliometric study of reference literature in the sciences and social sciences
Institution:1. Department of Management Control and Information Systems, University of Chile, Av. Diagonal Paraguay 257, 8330015 Santiago, Chile;2. Department of Business Administration, University of Valencia, Av. Tarongers S/N, 46022 Valencia, Spain;3. Department of Economics and Social Sciences, Polytechnic University of Valencia, Camino Vera s/n, 46022, València, Spain;4. Department of Business Administration, University of Valencia, Av. Tarongers S/N, 46022 Valencia, Spain;1. TBS Business School, Information, Operations and Management Sciences Department, Place Alphonse Jourdain, 31068, Toulouse, France;2. TBS Business School, University of Toulouse Capitole, Place Alphonse Jourdain, 31068, Toulouse, France;3. Paulista University – UNIP, Postgraduate Program in Business Administration, 04026-002, São Paulo, Brazil;1. Departamento de Dirección de Empresas, Facultad de Economía, Universitat de València, Avda. dels Tarongers s/n, 46022 Valencia, Spain;2. Departamento de Dirección de Empresas, Polytechnic University of Valencia, Camí de Vera s/n, 46022 Valencia, Spain
Abstract:In earlier papers the authors focused on differences in the ageing of journal literature in science and the social sciences. It was shown that for several fields and topics bibliometric standard indicators based on journal articles need to be modified in order to provide valid results. In fields where monographs, books or reports are important means of scientific information, standard models of scientific communication are not reflected by journal literature alone. To identify fields where the role of non-serial literature is considerable or critical in terms of bibliometric standard methods, the totality of the bibliographic citations indexed in the 1993 annual cumulation of the SCI and SSCI databases, have been processed. The analysis is based on three indicators, the percentage of references to serials, the mean references age, and the mean reference rate. Applications of these measures at different levels of aggregation (i.e., to journals in selected science and social science fields) lead to the following conclusions. 1. The percentage of references to serials proved to be a sensitive measure to characterise typical differences in the communication behaviour between the sciences and the social sciences. 2. However, there is an overlap zone which includes fields like mathematics, technology oriented science, and some social science areas. 3. In certain social sciences part of the information seems even to be originated in non-scientific sources: references to non-serials do not always represent monographs, pre-prints or reports. Consequently, the model of information transfer from scientific literature to scientific (journal) literature assumed by standard bibliometrics requires substantial revision before valid results can be expected through its application to social science areas.
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