Dasapta Erwin Irawan, Juneman Abraham, Jonathan P. Tennant, O. Pourret
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However, the accessibility, readability, and usability of those articles for local communities are major problems in measuring the impact of research, although it may be covered by well-known international scientific databases.\n Objectives: To ascertain empirically whether there are differences in document distribution, in the proportions of openly accessible documents, and in the geographical coverage of earth sciences topics as revealed through analyses of documents retrieved from scientific databases and to propose new measures for assessing the impact of research in earth sciences based on those differences.\n Methods: Relevant documents were retrieved using ‘earth sciences’ as a search term in English and other languages from ten databases of scientific publications. The results of these searches were analysed using frequency analysis and a quantitative- descriptive design.\n Results: (1) The number of articles in English from international databases exceeded the number of articles in native languages from national-level databases. (2) The number of open-access (OA) articles in the national databases was higher than that in other databases. (3) The geographical coverage of earth science papers was uneven between countries when the number of documents retrieved from closed-access commercial databases was compared to that from the other databases. (4) The regulations in Indonesia related to promotion of lecturers assign greater weighting to publications indexed in Scopus and the Web of Science (WoS) and publications in journals with impact factors are assigned a higher weighting.\n Conclusions: The dominance of scientific articles in English as well as the paucity of OA publications indexed in international databases (compared to those in national or regional databases) may have been due to the greater weighting assigned to such publications. Consequently, the relevance of research reported in those publications to local communities has been questioned. 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Earth researchers find state-of-the-art of topics in earth sciences by using scientific databases, conduct research on the topics, and write about them. However, the accessibility, readability, and usability of those articles for local communities are major problems in measuring the impact of research, although it may be covered by well-known international scientific databases.\\n Objectives: To ascertain empirically whether there are differences in document distribution, in the proportions of openly accessible documents, and in the geographical coverage of earth sciences topics as revealed through analyses of documents retrieved from scientific databases and to propose new measures for assessing the impact of research in earth sciences based on those differences.\\n Methods: Relevant documents were retrieved using ‘earth sciences’ as a search term in English and other languages from ten databases of scientific publications. 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引用次数: 2
摘要
背景:地球科学是解决当地自然和社会环境中的当地问题所迫切需要的敏感领域科学之一。地球研究人员通过使用科学数据库来发现地球科学领域最先进的主题,对这些主题进行研究,并撰写相关文章。然而,这些文章对当地社区的可访问性、可读性和可用性是衡量研究影响的主要问题,尽管它可能被知名的国际科学数据库所涵盖。目的:通过对科学数据库中检索到的文献的分析,实证地确定在文献分布、公开获取文献的比例以及地球科学主题的地理覆盖方面是否存在差异,并根据这些差异提出评估地球科学研究影响的新措施。方法:以“地球科学”为检索词,从10个科学出版物数据库中检索相关文献。使用频率分析和定量描述设计对这些搜索结果进行分析。结果:(1)国际数据库中英文文献的数量超过国家级数据库中母语文献的数量。(2)国家数据库开放获取(OA)文章数量高于其他数据库。(3)从商业数据库检索到的论文数量与从其他数据库检索到的论文数量相比,各国地球科学论文的地理覆盖范围不均衡。(4)印度尼西亚有关讲师晋升的法规赋予Scopus和Web of Science (WoS)索引的出版物更大的权重,具有影响因子的期刊上的出版物被赋予更高的权重。结论:英文科学文章占主导地位,以及国际数据库(与国家或地区数据库相比)检索的OA出版物较少,可能是由于这些出版物被赋予了更大的权重。因此,这些出版物中报告的研究与当地社区的相关性受到质疑。本文提出了一些开放科学实践,以将当前与促进相关的法规转变为更负责任的研究绩效和影响衡量方法。
The need for a new set of measures to assess the impact of research in earth sciences in Indonesia
Background: Earth sciences is one of those sensitive field sciences that are closely needed to solve local problems within local physical and social settings. Earth researchers find state-of-the-art of topics in earth sciences by using scientific databases, conduct research on the topics, and write about them. However, the accessibility, readability, and usability of those articles for local communities are major problems in measuring the impact of research, although it may be covered by well-known international scientific databases.
Objectives: To ascertain empirically whether there are differences in document distribution, in the proportions of openly accessible documents, and in the geographical coverage of earth sciences topics as revealed through analyses of documents retrieved from scientific databases and to propose new measures for assessing the impact of research in earth sciences based on those differences.
Methods: Relevant documents were retrieved using ‘earth sciences’ as a search term in English and other languages from ten databases of scientific publications. The results of these searches were analysed using frequency analysis and a quantitative- descriptive design.
Results: (1) The number of articles in English from international databases exceeded the number of articles in native languages from national-level databases. (2) The number of open-access (OA) articles in the national databases was higher than that in other databases. (3) The geographical coverage of earth science papers was uneven between countries when the number of documents retrieved from closed-access commercial databases was compared to that from the other databases. (4) The regulations in Indonesia related to promotion of lecturers assign greater weighting to publications indexed in Scopus and the Web of Science (WoS) and publications in journals with impact factors are assigned a higher weighting.
Conclusions: The dominance of scientific articles in English as well as the paucity of OA publications indexed in international databases (compared to those in national or regional databases) may have been due to the greater weighting assigned to such publications. Consequently, the relevance of research reported in those publications to local communities has been questioned. This article suggests some open-science practices to transform the current regulations related to promotion into a more responsible measurement of research performance and impact.
期刊介绍:
EASE"s journal, European Science Editing , publishes articles, reports meetings, announces new developments and forthcoming events, reviews books, software and online resources, and highlights publications of interest to members.