Todd Suomela's Library tagged → View Popular, Search in Google
-
One classic paper from 1991, for example, found that academic papers covered by the New York Times received more subsequent citations. Now, you might reasonably suggest a simple explanation: the journalists of the Times were good at spotting the most important work. But the researchers looking into this were lucky. They noticed the opportunity for a natural experiment when the printers – but not the journalists – of the Times went on strike.
The editorial staff continued to produce a "paper of record", which was laid down in the archives, but never printed, never distributed and never read. The scientific articles covered in these unprinted newspapers didn't see a subsequent uplift in citations. That is, if we can take a moment, a very clever piece of opportunistic research.
Selected Tags
Related Tags
Top Contributors
Groups interested in scientom...
-
Infometrics
Items: 114 | Visits: 6
Created by: Julien Sicot
-
Bibliometrics
Items: 34 | Visits: 4
Created by: methuselah halesuhtem
-
Bibliometrics
Grupo con información relaci...
Items: 1 | Visits: 1
Created by: Eduardo Alvarez
Highlighter, Sticky notes, Tagging, Groups and Network: integrated suite dramatically boosting research productivity. Learn more »
Join Diigo
