Monday, March 17, 2014

Faculty in Higher Education Salary Survey 2014

CUPAHR, the College and University Professional Association for Human Resources, has released its latest faculty salary survey: Salaries of Tenured and Tenure-Track Faculty at 4-Year Colleges, 2013-14
The Chronicle of Higher Education has an article about it and the interactive table on their website.
"Research universities are doctorate-granting institutions that the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching has classified as having either high or very high research activity."

The top three disciplines with the highest salaries are respectively Legal Profession, Business and Engineering.

Read the Executive Summary for methodology and a list of participating institutions.

Thursday, March 13, 2014

ISNI: International Standard Name Identifier



Author name disambiguation has become increasingly important with the rise of bibliometrics.


This article/interview from the Scholarly Kitchen by Todd Carpenter explains the goal of ISNI: the International Standard Name Identifier initiative and its relationship with the existing ORCID (see this post).

Monday, March 3, 2014

Academic publishers remove fake papers from journals

Following revelations from French researcher Cyril LabbĂ©, well-known editors such as IEEE or Springer had to remove conference proceeding papers created using SCIgen, a MIT-developed tool that creates computer-generated academic articles.

Read article in Nature: Publishers withdraw more than 120 gibberish papers. Cyril LabbĂ© has developed a tool to help identify papers authored via SCIen.

Friday, February 28, 2014

ShareLaTeX now open source


LaTeX users may already be using the ShareLaTex tool a web-based real-time collaborative LaTeX editor.

ShareLaTex is now open source, the authors hope that by opening up the code to all, requests for new features will be met faster than what their current resources allow.

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

One year with MOOCs, research findings from the first 17 edX classes

Courtesy of: MOOCs.com
Professors from MIT and Harvard report on their first year in MOOCs and the edX project

  • There were 841,687 registrations from 597,692 unique users
  • Only 5 percent earned a certificate of completion.
  • One-third of users never viewed any course materials.
  • More than half of those who completed at least half of the course went on to earn a certificate of completion

See also:
Education Week article from one of the authors, 
The First Year of edX: Research Findings to Inform Online Learning

Monday, January 27, 2014

Journal ranking by Scopus

The SCImago Journal & Country Rank is a "portal that includes the journals and country scientific indicators developed from the information contained in the Scopus database."
It offers finer levels of business and management categories than the - more well-known - Journal Citation Report by ISI Web of Knowledge.


Example for top 5 journals in
Subject Area: Business Management & Accounting
Subject Category: Organizational Behavior and Human Resources Management 





SCImago. (2007). SJR — SCImago Journal & Country Rank.
Retrieved January 27, 2014, from http://www.scimagojr.com

Hat tip to The University of Manchester Library Business Research Plus blog.

Friday, January 10, 2014

2014 Updated List of Predatory Publishers

As of January 2017, J. Beall has shut down his blog.

Jeffrey Beall, Scholarly Initiatives Librarian and Associate Professor at the University of Colorado Denver, has released the 2014 list of predatory publishers and questionable journals.
Reproduced with permission below, the table shows a significant growth in number:

Year
Number of predatory publishers
2011
18
2012
23
2013
225
2014
477

Citing data

A few links on citing data in research:


Friday, December 13, 2013

Can tweets really predict citations?

In contrast with the article 'Can tweets predict citations' a recent study finds very little correlation between the number of tweets received by articles in the biomedical literature and later citation counts obtained from more traditional methods.
Tweeting biomedicine: An analysis of tweets and citations in the biomedical literature

See also, Nature's article:
Twitter buzz about papers does not mean citations later