Popular and/or prestigious? Measures of scholarly esteem

作者:

Highlights:

摘要

Citation analysis does not generally take the quality of citations into account: all citations are weighted equally irrespective of source. However, a scholar may be highly cited but not highly regarded: popularity and prestige are not identical measures of esteem. In this study we define popularity as the number of times an author is cited and prestige as the number of times an author is cited by highly cited papers. Information retrieval (IR) is the test field. We compare the 40 leading researchers in terms of their popularity and prestige over time. Some authors are ranked high on prestige but not on popularity, while others are ranked high on popularity but not on prestige. We also relate measures of popularity and prestige to date of Ph.D. award, number of key publications, organizational affiliation, receipt of prizes/honors, and gender.

论文关键词:Citation analysis,Information retrieval,Popularity,Prestige,Esteem

论文评审过程:Received 5 October 2009, Revised 9 January 2010, Accepted 27 January 2010, Available online 23 February 2010.

论文官网地址:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ipm.2010.01.002