Category Archives: Uncategorized

Library Responses During the Early Days of the Pandemic: A Bibliometric Study of the 2020 LIS Literature (full-text)

As society emerges from an unprecedented pandemic that saw the closure of libraries, schools, and universities worldwide, the potential lasting impacts on institutions, professions, and communities can begin to be assessed. Through a bibliometric study of COVID-19-related library publishing, combined with thematic coding of article abstracts, this paper provides an initial glimpse into the impacts of the pandemic on library operations, services, collections, and the workforce. Two hundred thirty-seven journal articles published in 2020 about libraries and the pandemic were identified and analyzed. These articles indicate broad cross-sectoral, global impacts on libraries and librarianship. This analysis provides a baseline for future research on the lasting effects of the pandemic on the field.

https://doi.org/10.1080/01930826.2021.1984139

(A full-text pre-print scholarly version is available at https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1267&context=lib_fsdocs)

Author(s): Jane Kinkus Yatcilla, Sarah Young
Organization(s): Purdue University, Carnegie Mellon University
Source: Journal of Library Administration
Year: 2021

A systematic literature review of the User Innovation field (FULL-TEXT)

The research provides a systematic review of the conceptual, analytical and empirical user innovation literature from 1970 to 2013. It pretends to answer the following research questions: 1. What are the different research streams within the user innovation field? 2. How the community of scholars and the number of publications in the field have evolved? 3. What are the main journals publishing articles related to the field of user innovation? 4. Which are the most representative countries that have contributed to the development of user innovation? 5. What have been the main contributions to the field from the conceptual, analytical and empirical perspectives?

For FULL-TEXT see pp. 600-618 of Estrategias para la innovación y competitividad

Author(s): Sandra Jennina Sánchez Perdomo, Alazne Mujika-Alberd
Organization(s): Universidad EAN
Source: Estrategias para la Innovación y Competitividad en América Latina (pp. 600-613)
Year: 2020

Dynamics of Colombian Scientific Production in Economics: A Bibliometric Study in Scopus 2007-2019

The objective of the article was to evaluate the trends of scientific production in Economics with Colombian institutional affiliation during the period 2007 – 2019. A bibliometric analysis was carried out from the information registered in Scopus, through indicators of production, citation and collaboration and the quantitative exploratory method, using the Biblioshiny, Vantage Point and VosViewer software. The behavior of authors, journals and topics of higher publication visibility such as innovation and economic growth were studied. The main trends in the scientific production of Colombian authors with the highest publication in Scopus, present an annual average growth rate of 13%, in addition to publications in prestigious journals and important networks of national and international collaboration and predominance of co-authored publications (index 1.8), expanding the connection not only at the level of higher education institutions, but through research institutes. The Knowledge of the dynamics of disciplinary research in the study, contributed with information for the management of scientific activity and the design of future research in the country.

https://doi.org/10.17533/udea.le.n95a344139

Author(s): Nubia Yaneth Gómez Velasco, Orlando Gregorio Chaviano, Alba Lorena Ballesteros Alfonso
Organization(s): Universidad Pedagógica y Tecnológica de Colombia, Pontificia Universidad Javeriana
Source: Lecturas de Economía
Year: 2021

Studies on urban mobility and use of ICT in relation to cities’ sustainability. A bibliometric analysis (FULL-TEXT)

The objective of this article is to present three groups of analysis in urban mobility studies, their relationship with the use of ICT and how the findings promote urban sustainability. documents in the Scopus database were systematically reviewed. The research methodology used was mixed, where methods of qualitative analysis and bibliometric analysis were combined with the Vantage Point software. The results made it possible to establish which projects are at the forefront of the study of urban mobility. This article will contribute to future research and could be useful for discussions on public policy on urban mobility.

CLICK HERE FOR FULL-TEXT

Author(s): Ana Escobar, Jhon Zartha, Luciano Gallón
Organization(s): Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana
Source: Transactions on Transport Sciences
Year: 2021

Digital Technologies of Information and Communication and Social Hierarchy of Objects in the field of Education: empirical tests (FULL-TEXT)

This article presents the report of an empirical investigation on scientific production in Education using bibliometric and scientometric data analyzed based on concepts created by Pierre Bourdieu for the sociology of science with the aid of a historical and philosophical framework. Using metadata from more than 6000 theses defended between 1996 and 2016 in postgraduate education programs in Brazil with grades five and above, a map of the Social Hierarchy of Objects in the field of Education was generated. We also tried to empirically test the statement about research in Education that there was a loss of the research object in post-modernity and the importance in terms of scientific capital of Digital Information and Communication Technologies (TDIC). The data showed that the hierarchy of objects is very pulverized, but with a nucleus that concentrates a lot of scientific capital and that such concentration grew with the field. This can be explained by the high degree of heteronomy in the field and postmodern phenomena. However, it was possible to map that there are objects that bring more return of scientific capital to field agents: the teacher and his training. Therefore, there was no loss of the object. It was also possible to observe that words related to digital technologies grew and became part of the core of the hierarchy of objects in the field at the beginning of the 20th century. Digital Technologies are part of the core of the Social Hierarchy of Objects in the field of Education, mainly related to Distance Education.

For FULL-TEXT go to https://doi.org/10.1590/0104-4060.75776

Author(s): André Garcia Correa, Daniel Ribeiro Silva Mill
Organization(s): Federal Institute of Education Science and Technology, Federal University of São Carlos
Source: Educar em Revista
Year: 2020

Common contributing factors to COVID-19 and inflammatory bowel disease (full-text)

The devastating complications of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) result from an individual’s dysfunctional immune response following the initial severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection. Multiple toxic stressors and behaviors contribute to underlying immune system dysfunction. SARS-CoV-2 exploits the dysfunctional immune system to trigger a chain of events ultimately leading to COVID-19. We have previously identified many contributing factors (CFs) (representing toxic exposure, lifestyle factors and psychosocial stressors) common to myriad chronic diseases. We hypothesized significant overlap between CFs associated with COVID-19 and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), because of the strong role immune dysfunction plays in each disease. A streamlined dot-product approach was used to identify potential CFs to COVID-19 and IBD. Of the fifty CFs to COVID-19 that were validated for demonstration purposes, approximately half had direct impact on COVID-19 (the CF and COVID-19 were mentioned in the same record; i.e., CF—→COVID-19), and the other half had indirect impact. The nascent character of the COVID-19 core literature (∼ one year old) did not allow sufficient time for the direct impacts of many CFs on COVID-19 to be identified. Therefore, an immune system dysfunction (ID) literature directly related to the COVID-19 core literature was used to augment the COVID-19 core literature and provide the remaining CFs that impacted COVID-19 indirectly (i.e., CF—→immune system dysfunction—→COVID-19). Approximately 13000 potential CFs for myriad diseases (obtained from government and university toxic substance lists) served as the starting point for the dot-product identification process. These phrases were intersected (dot-product) with phrases extracted from a PubMed-derived IBD core literature, a nascent COVID-19 core literature, and the COVID-19-related immune system dysfunction (ID) core literature to identify common ID/COVID-19 and IBD CFs. Approximately 3000 potential CFs common to both ID and IBD, almost 2300 potential CFs common to ID and COVID-19, and over 1900 potential CFs common to IBD and COVID-19 were identified. As proof of concept, we validated fifty of these ∼3000 overlapping ID/IBD candidate CFs with biologic plausibility. We further validated 24 of the fifty as common CFs in the IBD and nascent COVID-19 core literatures. This significant finding demonstrated that the CFs indirectly related to COVID-19 — identified with use of the immune system dysfunction literature — are strong candidates to emerge eventually as CFs directly related to COVID-19. As discussed in the main text, many more CFs common to all these core literatures could be identified and validated. ID and IBD share many common risk/contributing factors, including behaviors and toxic exposures that impair immune function. A key component to immune system health is removal of those factors that contribute to immune system dysfunction in the first place. This requires a paradigm shift from traditional Western medicine, which often focuses on treatment, rather than prevention.

For FULL-TEXT https://doi.org/10.1016/j.toxrep.2021.08.007

Author(s): Ronald N. Kostoff, Michael B. Briggs, Darja Kanduc, Darla R. Shores, Leda Kovats, Alexander I. Vardavas, Alan L.Porter
Organization(s): Georgia Institute of Technology, University of Bari, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, University of Crete
Source: Toxicology Reports
Year: 2021

A critical review of international print advertisements: evolutionary analysis, assessment and elucidations, from 1965 to 2020

Amidst the plethora of mass communication methods that technology bestowed business with, print advertisements still remain an effective and widely utilized advertising tool, and retain a diachronically venerable position in international marketing practice. Bar and transcending mere academic fascination or curiosity, this research provides insights into the past, an understanding of the present and an outlook into the future. In this vein, through a methodical and comprehensive critical review of extant literature on print advertisements since 1965, this research aims to identify gaps in extant knowledge, to map its trends and divergences, to trace its paradigm shifts and to ultimately develop agendas for truly significant future research. This spatial-temporal study reviews 256 methodically selected articles, using VantagePoint software, and adopts a novel methodology through natural language processing (NLP), text mining, auto-correlation maps, and bubble maps to conduct and present a robust analysis and explicit findings. Using also the VOSviewer for density and network visualization, the results identify the predominant literature themes and, conversely, the relatively under-researched areas, and provide a more insightful collective interpretation of extant works, while laying the foundation for future research of greater value and significance to academia and industry. This study transcends the partial and/or limited analyses and perspectives of extant literature to present scholars with the first comprehensive and long term meta-analysis or systematic study of print advertising, with explicit findings of both scholarly and executive worth.

https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/IMR-11-2020-0257/full/html

Author(s): Suniti Vadalkar, Gitesh Chavan, Ranjan Chaudhuri, Demetris Vrontis
Organization(s): FLAME University, National Institute of Industrial Engineering, University of Nicosia
Source: International Marketing Review
Year: 2021

Unraveling the capabilities that enable digital transformation: A data-driven methodology and the case of artificial intelligence

Digital transformation (DT) is prevalent in businesses today. However, current studies to guide DT are mostly qualitative, resulting in a strong call for quantitative evidence of exactly what DT is and the capabilities needed to enable it successfully. With the aim of filling the gaps, this paper presents a novel bibliometric framework that unearths clues from scientific articles and patents. The framework incorporates the scientific evolutionary pathways and hierarchical topic tree to quantitatively identify the DT research topics’ evolutionary patterns and hierarchies at play in DT research. Our results include a comprehensive definition of DT from the perspective of bibliometrics and a systematic categorization of the capabilities required to enable DT, distilled from over 10,179 academic papers on DT. To further yield practical insights on technological capabilities, the paper also includes a case study of 9,454 patents focusing on one of the emerging technologies – artificial intelligence (AI). We summarized the outcomes with a four-level AI capabilities model. The paper ends with a discussion on its contributions: presenting a quantitative account of the DT research, introducing a process-based understanding of DT, offering a list of major capabilities enabling DT, and drawing the attention of managers to be aware of capabilities needed when undertaking their DT journey.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aei.2021.101368

Author(s): Mengjia Wu, Dilek Cetindamar Kozanoglu, Chao Min, Yi Zhang
Organization(s): University of Technology Sydney, Nanjing University
Source: Advanced Engineering Informatics
Year: 2021

Convergences between the Brazilian National Health Plan and scientific articles on Neglected Tropical Diseases (FULL-TEXT)

In Brazil, the National Health Plan (NHP) was the central instrument for public health planning from 2016 to 2019. In this paper, we show that there is a convergence between the Plan and the publication of scientific articles written by institutional researchers in the context of Neglected Tropical Diseases. The methodology used consisted of the following stages: identification of the universe of researchers, data collection, thematic characterization of Neglected Tropical Diseases in the Plan, organization of information, and production of indicators. In total, there were 2,719 researchers and 18,023 journal articles from 2015 to 2018. Of these, 2,541 articles, or 14.09%, were related to Neglected Tropical Diseases. Regarding the convergences, there was strong alignment with leishmaniasis, Chagas disease, dengue, leprosy, schistosomiasis, and Chikungunya fever. However, the coverage of topics by scientific publications was broader than that of the political instrument due to the inclusion of other themes: snake bites, helminthiasis and lymphatic filariasis

For FULL-TEXT DOI: https://doi.org/10.29397/reciis.v15i2.2220

Author(s): Natanael Vitor Sobral, Viviane Martha Santos de Morais, Leilah Santiago Bufrem, Raimundo Nonato Macedo dos Santos, Fabio Mascarenhas e Silva
Organization(s): Universidade Federal da Bahia, Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco
Source: RECIIS
Year: 2021

Ten years of SOHOMA Workshop Proceedings: A Bibliometric Analysis and Leading Trends

The SOHOMA Workshop series on Service Orientation in Holonic and Multi-Agent Manufacturing is a set of events aiming at fostering innovative research and practices in smart and sustainable manufacturing and logistics systems. The SOHOMA scientific community promotes the development of theories, methods, solutions, proof of concepts and implementations for the digital transformation of the industry of the future through intelligence distribution in service-oriented, holonic and agent-based systems. During ten editions, the workshops have gathered hundreds of researchers and practitioners that have presented their world-wide scientific contributions, published in the Springer book series “Studies in Computational Intelligence”. This paper presents an overview of the publication of the SOHOMA workshop proceedings by using a bibliometric analysis and identifies leading research and innovation trends generated by the SOHOMA community in the last ten years.

https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-69373-2

Author(s):Jose-Fernando Jimenez, Eliana Maria González Neira, Gloria Juliana Arias-Paredes, Damien Trentesaux, Olivier Cardin, Jorge Andrés Alvarado
Organization(s):Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Université Polytechnique Hauts-de-France
Source: Service Oriented, Holonic and Multi-Agent Manufacturing Systems for Industry of the Future (Springer)
Year: 2021