Author/Authors :
Paul Wouters ، نويسنده , , Repke de Vries، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
How do authors refer to Web-based information sources
in their formal scientific publications? It is not yet well
known how scientists and scholars actually include new
types of information sources, available through the new
media, in their published work. This article reports on
a comparative study of the lists of references in 38
scientific journals in five different scientific and social
scientific fields. The fields are sociology, library and
information science, biochemistry and biotechnology,
neuroscience, and the mathematics of computing. As is
well known, references, citations, and hyperlinks play
different roles in academic publishing and communication.
Our study focuses on hyperlinks as attributes of
references in formal scholarly publications. The study
developed and applied a method to analyze the differential
roles of publishing media in the analysis of scientific
and scholarly literature references. The present secondary
databases that include reference and citation
data (the Web of Science) cannot be used for this type of
research. By the automated processing and analysis of
the full text of scientific and scholarly articles, we were
able to extract the references and hyperlinks contained
in these references in relation to other features of the
scientific and scholarly literature. Our findings show that
hyperlinking references are indeed, as expected, abundantly
present in the formal literature. They also tend to
cite more recent literature than the average reference.
The large majority of the references are to Web instances
of traditional scientific journals. Other types of
Web-based information sources are less well represented
in the lists of references, except in the case of
pure e-journals. We conclude that this can be explained
by taking the role of the publisher into account. Indeed,
it seems that the shift from print-based to electronic
publishing has created new roles for the publisher. By
shaping the way scientific references are hyperlinking to
other information sources, the publisher may have a
large impact on the availability of scientific and scholarly
information