Title of article
Citation patterns of the pre-web and web-prevalent environments: The moderating effects of domain knowledge
Author/Authors
Ling-Ling Wu1، نويسنده , , Mu-Hsuan Huang2، نويسنده , , Ching-Yi Chen1، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
13
From page
2182
To page
2194
Abstract
The Internet has substantially increased the online accessibility of scholarly publications and allowed researchers to access relevant information efficiently across different journals and databases (Costa & Meadows, ). Because of online accessibility, academic researchers tend to read more, and reading has become more superficial (Olle & Borrego, ), such that information overload has become an important issue. Given this circumstance, how the Internet affects knowledge transfer, or, more specifically, the citation behavior of researchers, has become a recent focus of interest. This study assesses the effects of the Internet on citation patterns in terms of 4 characteristics of cited documents: topic relevance, author status, journal prestige, and age of references. This work hypothesizes that academic scholars cite more topically relevant articles, more articles written by lower status authors, articles published in less prestigious journals, and older articles with online accessibility. The current study also hypothesizes that researcher knowledge level moderates such Internet effects. We chose the “IT and Group” subject area and collected 241 documents published in the pre-web period (1991–1995) and 867 documents published in the web-prevalent period (2006–2010) in the Web of Science database. The references of these documents were analyzed to test the proposed hypotheses, which are significantly supported by the empirical results.
Keywords
Internet inforamation resources , Citation analysis , information access , scholarly publishing , domain knowledge
Journal title
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Record number
994753
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