Re: [CODE4LIB] "Citation Analysis" - like projects for print resources

2011-11-18 Thread Min-Yen Kan
Hi all: If you have the raw text of the books or reference articles that you are interested in, you might try looking at our tool, ParsCit (already mentioned and known to a few people on the list), to extract and format the reference strings in a bibliography. http://wing.comp.nus.edu.sg/parsCit

Re: [CODE4LIB] "Citation Analysis" - like projects for print resources

2011-11-17 Thread Bill Dueber
If I'm understanding you correctly, you're describing citation analysis (sometimes referred to as a part of bibliometrics). It is mostly applied to article data (e.g, the web of science / web of knowledge at ISI) but there are zillions of studies looking at co-citation and co-authorship networks, t

Re: [CODE4LIB] "Citation Analysis" - like projects for print resources

2011-11-17 Thread Joe Hourcle
On Nov 17, 2011, at 12:09 PM, Miles Fidelman wrote: > Matt Amory wrote: >> Is anyone involved with, or does anyone know of any project to extract and >> aggregate bibliography data from individual works to produce some kind of >> "most-cited" authors list across a collection? Local/Network/Digita

Re: [CODE4LIB] "Citation Analysis" - like projects for print resources

2011-11-17 Thread Miles Fidelman
Matt Amory wrote: Is anyone involved with, or does anyone know of any project to extract and aggregate bibliography data from individual works to produce some kind of "most-cited" authors list across a collection? Local/Network/Digital/OCLC or historic? Sorry to be vague, but I'm trying to get

Re: [CODE4LIB] "Citation Analysis" - like projects for print resources

2011-11-17 Thread Roy Tennant
Here's some data that might be interesting to play with: "The Early Journal Content on JSTOR includes journal articles published in the United States before 1923 and articles published in other countries before 1870, and

Re: [CODE4LIB] "Citation Analysis" - like projects for print resources

2011-11-17 Thread Matt Amory
SERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of > Matt Amory > Sent: Thursday, November 17, 2011 9:41 AM > To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU > Subject: [CODE4LIB] "Citation Analysis" - like projects for print resources > > Is anyone involved with, or does anyone know of any project to extract and > a

Re: [CODE4LIB] "Citation Analysis" - like projects for print resources

2011-11-17 Thread Sheila M. Morrissey
R, JSTOR, and Portico. -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Matt Amory Sent: Thursday, November 17, 2011 9:41 AM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU Subject: [CODE4LIB] "Citation Analysis" - like projects for print resources Is an

Re: [CODE4LIB] "Citation Analysis" - like projects for print resources

2011-11-17 Thread Matt Amory
Thanks Cindy, I was thinking that Hathi or eBrary or Google Books or OCLC data could be good benchmarks too. I'm also fascinated by trying to OCR extant copies of National Bibliographies to get a historical take on the same issue (that's what I meant by "historical"). Something like a Google nGram

[CODE4LIB] "Citation Analysis" - like projects for print resources

2011-11-17 Thread Matt Amory
Is anyone involved with, or does anyone know of any project to extract and aggregate bibliography data from individual works to produce some kind of "most-cited" authors list across a collection? Local/Network/Digital/OCLC or historic? Sorry to be vague, but I'm trying to get my head around wheth