2020
DOI: 10.1007/s11192-020-03706-z
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Covid-19 pandemic and the unprecedented mobilisation of scholarly efforts prompted by a health crisis: Scientometric comparisons across SARS, MERS and 2019-nCoV literature

Abstract: During the current century, each major coronavirus outbreak has triggered a quick and immediate surge of academic publications on its respective topic. The spike in research publications following the 2019 Novel Coronavirus (Covid-19) outbreak, however, has been like no other. The global crisis caused by the Covid-19 pandemic has mobilised scientific efforts at an unprecedented scale. In less than 5 months, more than 12,000 research items and in less than seven months, more than 30,000 items were indexed, whil… Show more

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Cited by 68 publications
(55 citation statements)
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“…Their study was intended to provide information about the pathogen as a whole (but not limited to the new coronavirus) keeping in view to map the previous research in this field. Haghani and Bliemer ( 2020 ) pursued a scientometric comparison across the literature on SARS, MARS, and nCoV-2. Their study focused on the co-occurrence of keywords, citation relations of journals, bibliographic coupling along with the international collaboration scenario.…”
Section: Earlier Effortsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Their study was intended to provide information about the pathogen as a whole (but not limited to the new coronavirus) keeping in view to map the previous research in this field. Haghani and Bliemer ( 2020 ) pursued a scientometric comparison across the literature on SARS, MARS, and nCoV-2. Their study focused on the co-occurrence of keywords, citation relations of journals, bibliographic coupling along with the international collaboration scenario.…”
Section: Earlier Effortsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…What?” of this explosively growing research literature [e.g., our biweekly updates, using the standard NLM historical and COVID-19 search query have grown from 19,538 publications on March 25, 2020, to 47,607 on July 2 (used in the present analyses), and 70,193 as of September 6]. Haghani and Bliemer ( 2020 ) and Thelwall ( 2020 ) conducted the case that historical research bears importantly on current COVID-19 research. Such profile information should facilitate identifying and locating key players and their research foci.…”
Section: Results Part 1: Covid-19 Research Profilementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In our NSF project, we intend to complement the use of a core PubMed dataset with clinical trials.gov and WoS. Some variations include the following: Haghani and Bliemer ( 2020 ) and Homolak et al ( 2020 ) used Scopus as well; Liu et al ( 2020 ) complemented PubMed with EMBASE; Niehs' group ( https://www.collabovid.org ) draw upon PubMed, Elsevier, and three preprint resources—medRxiv, bioRxiv, and arXiv. Lima et al ( 2020 ) reviewed the domain drawing upon PubMed, Scopus, Cochrane Library, and Biblioteca Virtual de Saude (BVS).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, the lack of continuity of the virtual location of previous documents available (links) and lack of user-friendly platforms hindered the health-professionals' ability to access valuable information. Thus, clinicians were challenged to search, manage and appraise an unprecedented amount of scientific evidence during the COVID-19 response [28] .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%