Indian Publication Output during 1998-2009: Quantitative Analysis Based on Web of Science (original) (raw)
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DESIDOC Journal of Library & Information Technology
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A Scientometric Analysis of S&T Publications Output by India during 1985-2002
DESIDOC Journal of Library & Information Technology
The paper analyses India's publications output in three major international multidisciplinary databases, as indexed during 1981-2005. It reports on India's comparative strength in world science and technology (S&T) output, its growth and decline, its strong and weak subject areas of research, media of communication, its collaborative profile and quality of S&T output, institutional productivity and quality, and dynamics of Indian research at institutional and sectoral levels. The study also provides suggestions for improving the quantity and quality of research S&T in India.
Scientometric analysis of 146 and 59 research articles published in Indian journal of Information Sources and Services (IJISS) and Pakistan Journal of Library and Information Science has been carried out. Seven Volumes of the IJISS containing 14 issues and Seven volumes of PJLIS containing 8 issues from 2011 – 2017 have been taken into consideration for the present study. The number of contributions, authorship pattern & author productivity, average citations, average length of articles, average keywords and collaborative papers has been analyzed. Out of 146 of IJISS contributions, only 39 are single authored and rest by multi authored with degree of collaboration 0.73 and week collaboration among the authors and from 59 contributions of PJLIS only 18 are single authored and rest by multi authored with degree of collaboration 0.69 and week collaboration among the authors. The study revealed that the author productivity is 0.53 (IJISS) and 0.50 (PJLIS) and dominated by the Indian and Pakistani authors.
Scientometric profile of Indian science as seen through Science Citation Index
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An analysis of 11067 papers published by Indian scientists and indexed by Scie/lce Citatio/l!Ili!ex (SCI) CD-ROM for the year 1997 indicates that academic institutions (universities and colleges) are the major contributors to the scientific publications output. Major contribution came from 29 institutions, which contributed about 45% of the total Indian scientific output. Based on the values of different impact indicators (normalized impact per paper, publication effective index and relative quality index) TIFR outperforms all other institutions on different impact indicators. Fifty seven percent of the output is concentrated in physical sciences, chemical and medical sciences. Indian scientists widely publish their findings in journals published from the scientifically advanced countries of the West. Based on these values of the Normalized Impact Factor (NIF), it is observed that about two-third of the total papers have appeared in low and medium NIF journals.
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This article carried out a Scientometric analysis of research publications published in various science and technology journals from 2011 to 2020 from India. Required data was retrieved from WoS database during the study period it provides information about the science and technology related publications from India. Especially, scientific data on the top research areas and distribution of publication collaborations in different dimensions of geography, authors, funding agencies, subjects and others. It examines the year wise publications, annual distribution of publications, most prolific authors, authors and organisations productivity, etc. Analysis found that, highest research publications are published in the year 2019 with 13.16%, followed by 2020 with 12.98% and in the year 2018 with 11.51%. Research articles are published 81.51% compared to any other type of publications from all over India. 88% of the research fund is provided by the Government of India, and remaining are from the western world among the top ten funding agencies. Out of top ten journals, seven (76%) of them are originated from India, two are from United Kingdom and one journal is from United States of America. During the study period, it is observed that, a mean relative growth rate is 0.26. Notably, the doubling time for the publications has decreased from 0.35 in the first five years to 0.17 in the last five years. Publications are raised on an average of 4.72% per year. On the whole, 208 countries collaborators contributed to these publications.
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An analysis of 801 papers published in the area of bibliometrics and scientometrics during 1995-2014 indicates a steep increase in the number of papers published by Indian researchers as compared to the number of papers published during 1970-1994. This indicates a growing interest of Indian scholars in scientometrics and bibliometrics. The paper provides several reasons for this steep increase. The main focus of research is on bibliometric assessment of India and other countries followed by cross national assessment and bibliometric analysis of individual journals. CSIR-NISTADS is the top producing institute contributing about one-third (31.4%) of the total output followed by the output of Bhabha Atomic Research Centre and CSIR-NISCAIR. The distribution of citation data indicates that about one-fifth (21.7%) papers remained uncited. The paper identifies journals in which these uncited papers were published. Only 15% papers were cited more than 20 times. Most of the prolific authors ...
Publication Productivity of University of Kerala: A Scientometric View
DESIDOC Journal of Library & Information Technology
Web of Science is a major citation database which provides access to the world's leading scholarly literature. University of Kerala is one of the premier higher education institutes which cater the educational needs of the Kerala. The present study evaluates the research productivity of University of Kerala based on the data collected from Web of Science over a period of thirteen years from 2000 to 2012. This study attempts to analyse the overall performance of the faculty members of Science Departments of University of Kerala in research productivity. The parameters such as form-wise, year-wise, subject-wise classification of published papers, most productive authors and the most preferred journals, etc. are considered for the study. The impact factor and the citation received were also analysed. The study reveals that Chemistry is the subject which produces more number of papers while the multi-authorship also possesses a lead role in this subject. Indian journals are the most preferred journals to publish the articles which are followed by UK. Collaborative Coefficient varies from subject to subject. The result shows that the research productivity of the University of Kerala is much recognised at international level.
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An analysis of 5317 articles and reviews published in 46 Indian science journals indexed by Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE) during 2006 indicated that these journals predominantly published domestic papers. About 40 percent of the papers published in these journals were cited in the international literature during January 2006-June 2009. The proportion of cited papers and the rate of citation varied for domestic, foreign and collaborative papers, as well as among disciplines and publishers. The analysis indicated that collaborative papers had the highest rate of citation per paper. The Indian Journal of Medical Research published by Indian Council of Medical Research, New Delhi had the highest citation impact. Highest number of papers was cited in the discipline of medicine.