2022
DOI: 10.1007/s11192-022-04494-4
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A grey zone for bibliometrics: publications indexed in Web of Science as anonymous

Abstract: Publications without authorship information have been indexed as anonymous in the Web of Science database over the years. However, discussions on this subject have not been sufficiently addressed in the scholarly literature. Since bibliometrics studies are widely used for bibliometricians, scientific disciplines, science policy, and management, missing significant data as authorship metadata characterizes a gray zone that directly impacts these three components, and by extension, for bibliometrics and scientom… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…This raw data includes, for example, the document title, the author’s name and address, the publication’s name and year, language, and the number of times it has been cited. This database was chosen to create the corpus of articles for our bibliometric study on criminal interrogations and investigative interviews because it is “one of the most reliable publisher-independent global citation databases in the world” ( Shamsi et al, 2022 , p. 5992). The high quality of the metadata on Web of Science compared to Google Scholar was also considered ( Mongeon and Paul-Hus, 2016 ; Sugimoto and Larivière, 2018 ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This raw data includes, for example, the document title, the author’s name and address, the publication’s name and year, language, and the number of times it has been cited. This database was chosen to create the corpus of articles for our bibliometric study on criminal interrogations and investigative interviews because it is “one of the most reliable publisher-independent global citation databases in the world” ( Shamsi et al, 2022 , p. 5992). The high quality of the metadata on Web of Science compared to Google Scholar was also considered ( Mongeon and Paul-Hus, 2016 ; Sugimoto and Larivière, 2018 ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The difficulty of ensuring complete anonymization in the modern era of big data can put an end to the centuries‐old history of using pseudonyms in scholarly communications and preserving the anonymity of authors. A scientist might not always be able to maintain their anonymity, such as whistleblowers, and anonymous scientists can be relatively easily unmasked, and information about their real identity linked to a pseudonym can quickly spread on the Internet and be stored in many databases, such as the Web of Science (WoS; Shamsi et al, 2022). Can a scientist, under the RTBF, demand the return of their anonymity, or is this prerogative of researchers a thing of the past?…”
Section: Rtbf and The Issue Of Data (And Identity) Anonymizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bibliometrics, a quantitative method analyzing scholarly literature, assesses research impact through citation counts, publication frequencies, and authorship patterns, offering insights into academic publication influence and visibility ( 18–20 ). Commonly used across disciplines, bibliometrics, including citation counts, H -index, and journal impact factors, aids in understanding research trends, evaluating scholarly productivity, and informing decision-making processes in academia ( 21 ). Hence, it has been utilized to examine global trends in GPT-related research, such as plastic surgery ( 22 ), obstetrics and gynecology ( 23 ), and pediatric surgery ( 2 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%