Monday, August 25, 2014

Lecture at Ranganathan Memorial Event by RRC 24 Aug 2014

Ranganathan Research Circle organised the above event on Subday at Pragati Maidan, Delhi. I attended the same after a very long time. I was invited to be one of the panelist. The hall was full to capacity. Subash Deshmukh, Librarian, GGSS Univ was the anchor.

The panel speech session started after homage to Dr SR Ranganathan, Dr Shadab Ansari Ex Head Deptt of LIS, Jamia was the Chairman. Besides me, other speakers included, Dr Daulat Jotwani, Librarian, IIT Bombay, Mr Babbar from JNU Library, Dr Srivastava from Supreme Court Library and Shubhash Deshmukh. Other present in the audience included Miss Heera Kapasi (Ex Libn American Centre), Dr Ratnakar, Dr Dhawan, Dr Sharma from (MIn of I&B), Dr Verma (Ex Patel Chest Library), Dr DK Kaushik,
I spoke on the challenges in Library administration and Management. About the cahllenged in acquiring E-journals and e-books . especially the event when Harper & Collins changed their terns asking libraries to buy again after 28(?) downloads.

Sunday, July 27, 2014

Research In LIS

Real-time plagiarism checker debuts for Microsoft Word



"Although the app itself is technically free, Academic Wordsmith costs $19 per year. For the price, users can submit as many papers as they’d like to the service, comparing them to the Wordsmith database to make sure that “research” doesn’t wander into plagiarism. 
A number of services already offer to scan your documents for plagiarism, checking them against Wikipedia and other sources. However, most, if not all, require users to write the document, then upload it. Since Academic Wordsmith runs on top of Word, the developers claim that you can wait until you’re finished with the paper—or simply upload a passage as you’re writing it, without leaving Word or the Office suite."

Librametric, Bibliometric, Scientometrics, Informetrics
Librametric, Bibliometric, Scientometrics, Informetrics: The Librametric, bibliometric, scientometrics, informetrics are overlapping areas, though their scopes are not the same.
1. Librametry: Dr. S. R. Ranganathan coined the term librametry and presented his concept in 1948 at the ASLIB conference held at Lemington Spa. He said that “there is a need to develop this subject on the lines of Biometry, Econometry, Psychometry, etc. He used the term to include statistical approaches to the study of library and its services. However, the practice of using quantitative method to measure information sources were made even before Dr. S. R. Ranganathan either under different name or without any name at all. For instance E. J. Cole and Nellie Eales in 1917, graphically mapped the literature and called this as “Statistical analysis”, E. Wyndham Hulme in 1922 studied the literature and called it “statistical bibliography”, but the terms were found to be clumsy as it could easily be mistaken.
2. Bibliometrics: The formal term “bibliometric” was first used by Alan Pritchard in his article “Statistical bibliography or bibliometric” in 1969 published in the “Journal of Documentation”. “Biblio” means book and “metric” means a scale or measure. Bibliometric means application of statistical studies in library and information science.
            Pritchard defines bibliometric as “the application of mathematical and statistical methods to books and other media of communication”.       Potter defines bibliometric as “the study and measurement of the publication pattern of all forms of written communication and their author”.
Thus bibliometric is a sort of measuring techniques by which interconnected aspect of written communication can be quantified. It is the study, or measurement, of texts and information. Bibliometrics utilizes quantitative analysis and statistics to describe patterns of publication within a given field or body of literature. Researchers may use bibliometric methods of evaluation to determine the influence of a single writer, for example, or to describe the relationship between two or more writers or works. One common way of conducting bibliometric research is to use the Social Science Citation Index, the Science Citation Index or the Arts and Humanities Citation Index to trace citations.
a) Bibliometric Techniques: There are different kinds of bibliometric techniques. For example-
i) Productivity Count: It deals with books articles, words in a text, place of publication, subject matter, time and date of publication, publishing institution, authors, author’s institution, etc. Nicholas and Ritchie in the book “Literature and Bibliometrics” called it as productivity count or descriptive.
ii) Literature Usage Count: It deals with citation in published works, circulation, frequency of borrowing or browsing different library material, failure and success in search strategies, search option , etc. Nicholas and Ritchie called it as “Evaluative”.
b) Laws of Bibliometrics: One of the main areas in bibliometric research concerns the application of bibliometric laws. The three most commonly used laws in bibliometrics are - Lotka's Law of Scientific Productivity, Bradford's Law of Scatter, and Zipf's Law of Word Occurrence;
i) Lotka's Law of Scientific Productivity: In 1926, Alfred J. Lotka proposed an inverse square law relating to scientific papers to the number of contributions made by each author. Lotka's Law describes the frequency of publication by authors in a given field. It states that ". . . the number (of authors) making n contributions is about 1/n² of those making one; and the proportion of all contributors, that make a single contribution, is about 60 percent". This means that out of all the authors in a given field, 60 percent will have just one publication, and 15 percent will have two publications (1/2² times . 60), 7 percent of authors will have three publications (1/3² times . 60), and so on. According to Lotka's Law of scientific productivity, only six percent of the authors in a field will produce more than 10 articles.
Lotka’s equation is xn.y= Constant.
Where
Y= Frequency of authors making n contribution, the value of the constant was found to be 0.6079
ii) Bradford's Law of Scatter: Samuel Clement Bradford in 1934 points out that if scientific journals are arranged in order of decreasing productivity of articles on a given subject, they may be divided into a nucleus of periodicals more particularly devoted to the subject and several groups and zones containing the same number of articles as the nucleus when the number of periodicals in the nucleus and succeeding zones will be 1: n: n2.
Bradford's Law states that journals in a single field can be divided into three parts, each containing the same number of articles:
* A core of journals on the subject, relatively few in number, that produces approximately one-third of all the articles;
* A second zone, containing the same number of articles as the first, but a greater number of journals, and
* A third zone, containing the same number of articles as the second, but a still greater number of journals.
The mathematical relationship of the number of journals in the core to the first zone is a constant n and to the second zone the relationship is n². Bradford expressed this relationship as 1 : n : n². Bradford formulated his law after studying a bibliography of geophysics, covering 326 journals in the field. He discovered that 9 journals contained 429 articles, 59 contained 499 articles, and 258 contained 404 articles. So it took 9 journals to contribute one-third of the articles, 5 times of 9, or 45, to produce the next third, and 5 times 5 times 9, or 225, to produce the last third.
Bradford's Law serves as a general guideline to librarians in determining the number of core journals in any given field. Bradford's Law is not statistically accurate, but it is still commonly used as a general rule of thumb.
iii) Zipf's Law of Word Occurrence: George K. Zipf, 1947 states that if the words occurring in a natural language text of sizable length were listed in the order of decreasing frequency then the rank of any given word in the list would be inversely proportional to the frequency of occurrence of the word. Zipf’s equation is
r . f = k, Where   r = Rank;
f = Frequency of Word;
k = Constant
The Law states that in a relatively lengthy text, if you "list the words occurring within that text in order of decreasing frequency, the rank of a word on that list multiplied by its frequency will equal a constant. The equation for this relationship is: r x f = k where r is the rank of the word, f is the frequency, and k is the constant. Zipf illustrated his law with an analysis of James Joyce's Ulysses. "He showed that the tenth most frequent word occurred 2,653 times, the hundredth most frequent word occurred 265 times, the two hundredth word occurred 133 times, and so on. Zipf found, then that the rank of the word multiplied by the frequency of the word equals a constant that is approximately 26,500".
c) Uses of Bibliometric Studies: Historically bibliometric methods have been used to trace relationships amongst academic journal citations. The bibliometric research uses various methods of citation analysis in order to establish relationships between authors or their work. The Bibliometric studies are used in
  • i) Measuring the scattering of articles on a subject in various periodicals (Bradford).
  • ii) Measuring the productivity of an author based on the number of published articles. (Lotka).
  • iii) Ranking of words in a text based on frequency of occurrence of words.
  • iv) Productivity count of literature.
  • v) To identify the peers, social change and the core journal, etc.
  • vi) Indexing and Thesaurus;
  • vii) Research;
  • viii) Formulating search strategies in case of automated system;
  • ix) Comparative assessment of the secondary services;
  • x) Bibliographic control;
  • xi) Preparation of retrospective bibliographic and
  • xii) Library Management.

3. Scientometrics: This term was introduced and came into prominence with the founding of the journal named “Scientometrics” by T. Braunin in 1977, originally published in Hungary and currently from Amsterdam.
            The term “Scientometrics” was used to mean the application of quantitative methods to the history of science but it is now generally used as a generic term for a variety of research approaches within the study of science that a quantifiable aspect of science can be utilized to assess the characteristic of science.
            Marton and Garfield have defined it as the field of enquiry given over to the quantitative analysis of science and scientific field.
4. Informetrics: According to Brooker the term “informetrics” was first proposed by Otto Nacke of West Germany in 1979. It focused on information productivity. It interprets information technology and considers interaction of information theory, cybermetrics, decision theory, etc.
5. Webmetrics: Webmetrics can be defined as using of bibliometric techniques in order to study the relationship of different sites on the World Wide Web. Such techniques may also be used to map out (called "scientific mapping" in traditional bibliometric research) areas of the Web that appear to be most useful or influential, based on the number of times they are hyperlinked to other Web sites.
       According to Sen, bibliometric deals with document and its component while informetrics studies pertaining to information. Morales use the term informetrics to cover almost all the aspect of bibliometric and librametrics.




Citation Analysis: When one author cites another author, a relationship is established. Citation analysis uses citations in scholarly works to establish that relationship (links). Many different links can be ascertained, such as links between authors, between scholarly works, between journals, between fields, or even between countries. Citations both from and to a certain document may be studied. The Science Citation Index began publication in 1961.
One very common use of citation analysis is to determine the impact of a single author on a given field by counting the number of times the author has been cited by others. Citation indices, such as Institute for Scientific Information's Web of Science, allow users to search forward in time from a known article to more recent publications which cite the known item.  Information scientists also use citation analysis to quantitatively assess the core journal.
Google's PageRank is based on the principle of citation analysis. Other bibliometrics applications include: creating thesauri; measuring term frequencies; exploring grammatical and syntactical structures of texts.

Data from citation indexes can be analyzed to determine the popularity and impact of specific articles, authors, and publications. However the limitation of citation analysis is that they are often incomplete or biased; data has been largely collected by hand (which is expensive), though citation indexes can also be used; incorrect citing of sources occurs continually; thus, further investigation is required to truly understand the rationale behind citing to allow it to be confidently applied.
a) Co-citation Coupling: If papers A and B are both cited by paper C, they may be said to be related to one another, even though they don't directly cite each other. If papers A and B are both cited by many other papers, they have a stronger relationship. The more papers they are cited by, the stronger their relationship is. Co-citation coupling is a method used to establish a subject similarity between two documents.

b) Bibliographic Coupling: Bibliographic coupling is the mirror image of co-citation coupling. Bibliographic coupling links two papers that cite the same articles, so that if papers A and B both cite paper C, they may be said to be related, even though they don't directly cite each other. The more papers they both cite, the stronger their relationship is.

Friday, July 25, 2014

Copyright

AIMA Delhi: Bibliographic Analysis Tools [25-26 July]

Web of Science: Web of Science provides you access to the most reliable, integrated, multidisciplinary research connected through linked content citation metrics from multiple sources within a single interface. And since Web of Science adheres to a strict evaluation process, you can be assured only the most influential, relevant, and credible information is included - allowing you to uncover your next big idea faster.
Scopus
Google Scholar

BibExcel BibExcel is designed to assist a user in analysing bibliographic data, or any data of a textual nature formatted in a similar manner.Theidea is to generate data files that can be imported to Excel, or any program that takes tabbed data records, for further processing.
This tool-box includes a number of tools, some of them visible in the window and others hide behind the menues. Don't try to learn them all at once. Better to start with what you want to accomplish and then try out the tools for that purpose. Many of the tools can be used in combination to achieve the desired result.
So far bibexcel is a free-ware for academic non-profit use.


PoP Publish or Perish

The 4 Basic Principles of Presentation Design

Creating a beautiful presentation requires a symphony of visual elements to work together for a “big picture.” Designers seek to make the entire vision work together in terms of how each part interacts. This includes layout, typography, and imagery, which all add up to a cohesive set of design elements. So, how can you orchestrate the chaos of design in your next presentation? Use the principles below to guide your way....... READ MORE

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

ricklibrarian: Technology's Future at Public Libraries: Staying R...

ricklibrarian: Technology's Future at Public Libraries: Staying R...: Most of the news is good when it comes to technology and libraries, according to the latest report from the Pew Internet and American Life P...
3 levels of knowledge service maturity



Friday, February 21, 2014

Best Bibliographic and Citation Tools


Bibliogo is unlike any other literature acquisition and management tool for Life Science and Engineering professionals and the companies they work for.
With Bibliogo, individuals and workgroups follow, obtain, organize and collaborate around scientific and technical papers in ways they never thought possible.
Their companies also benefit from lower content acquisition costs, improved intellectual property protection, and reduced regulatory and copyright compliance risk.





For details 



JabRef title

Qiqqa is award winning Research and PDF Management Software.