Thursday, November 17, 2011

Google Scholar Citations open to all!

Use Google Scholar Citation to
  • Track citations to your publications 
  • View publications by colleagues 
  • Appear in Google Scholar search results
From the announcement:
Here’s how it works. You can quickly identify which articles are yours, by selecting one or more groups of articles that are computed statistically. Then, we collect citations to your articles, graph them over time, and compute your citation metrics - the widely used h-index; the i-10 index, which is simply the number of articles with at least ten citations; and, of course, the total number of citations to your articles. Each metric is computed over all citations and also over citations in articles published in the last five years.
You will need to login with a Google account, by default your profile is private but you can decide to make it public.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Book Citation Index is released

The book citation index has been launched as part of the Web of Knowledge

It covers 25,000 books in the sciences, social sciences, and arts and humanities dating back to 2005.
13.5 million additional cited references will appear inWeb of Knowledge as a result of this launch.  
Coverage is expected to rise to 30,000 books by the end of 2011, with 10,000 new books added each year.

What's in it?
  • The Book Citation Index will cover only scholarly books that present fully referenced articles of original research, or reviews of the literature. 
  • The Book Citation Index will cover both series and non-series books.
  • The Science Edition of the Book Citation Index will include books with copyright from the current or previous five (5) years (e.g. 2010-2005)
  • The Social Science & Humanities Edition of the Book Citation Index will include books with copyright from the current or previous seven (7) years.
For a full explanation of the selection process click here.
For the Master Book List and a list of publishers covered click here.
For the press release click here.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Kindle Fire: Amazon's tablet is out!

Amazon announced yesterday the release of the Kindle Fire, its new tablet. It will be available on November 15 at $199.  


Authors sue the HathiTrust

The HathiTrust is an initiative from a variety of academic institutions to 'build a reliable and increasingly comprehensive digital archive of library materials'.
On September 12, the Authors Guild, the Australian Society of Authors, the Union Des Écrivaines et des Écrivains Québécois (UNEQ), and eight individual authors filed a law suit against HathiTrust, the University of Michigan, the University of California, the University of Wisconsin, Indiana University, and Cornell University for copyright infringement. 
HathiTrust Logo



This page has the legal documents and various reactions to that lawsuit.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

E-textbooks: another project

Indiana University has released a summary of two years of research on their E-Textbook project.

About 60% of the students surveyed said they preferred the e-textbook to a paper textbook, although this ranged from a high of 84% to a low of 36% depending upon the course.

Factors influencing preference for e-textbooks:
Ability for instructor to annotate and share with the class:
69%
Sustainability (reducing paper)
67%
Cost
64%
Weight of Books
61%
Student Annotations
60%

See also Chronicle article on the topic:
The university requires certain students to purchase e-textbooks and negotiates unusually low prices by promising publishers large numbers of sales—now has the participation of major textbook publishers, and university officials plan to expand the effort.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Hacking the Academy

Hacking the Academy, a book crowdsourced in one week

In May 2010 the two authors Dan Cohen and Tom Scheinfeldt asked online:
Can an algorithm edit a journal? Can a library exist without books? Can students build and manage their own learning management platforms? Can a conference be held without a program? Can Twitter replace a scholarly society?
They picked the best submissions (over 300 received in one week) and posted the volume online. Click here for more about the methodology. This initiative comes from the University of Michigan Digital Culture project.

Here are some shortcuts to the main chapters:

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

From Scroll to Screen


We’re witnessing the bibliographical equivalent of the rapture. If anything we may be lowballing the weirdness of it all.