Publication | Open Access
Publication Patterns of U.S. Academic Librarians from 1998 to 2002
69
Citations
14
References
2006
Year
Publication PatternsU.s. Academic LibrariansInternational LibrarianshipAcademic LibrariansBibliometricsCitation AnalysisImpact FactorAcademic Librarian AuthorsStatisticsJournalismLibrary Science
This study examines the contributions of U.S. academic librarians to the peer-reviewed literature of library and information science (LIS). Compared to the authors’ study of thirty-two journals for 1993–1997, the present study finds that for 1998–2002, there were declines in the total number of refereed articles (almost 4%), number of refereed articles by academic librarians (almost 13%), proportion of refereed articles by academic librarians (just over 4%), proportion of academic librarian authors (almost 3%), and proportion of coauthored articles by academic librarians (almost 4%). Because different factors influence rates of authorship in a given set of journals and these rates tend to fluctuate in the short term, only further investigation can assess whether the declines are momentary or the start of a trend. Approximately 7 percent of academic librarians wrote three or more articles. The twenty most productive libraries published more than 10 percent of all refereed articles in the thirty-two journals and nearly one-third of the articles by academic librarians.
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