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Scientometrics, Volume 7
Volume 7, Numbers 1-2, January 1985
- M. Oromaner:
The Ortega hypothesis and influential articles in American sociology. 3-10 - P. Bakker, H. Rigter:
Editors of medical journals: Who and from where. 11-22 - Anton J. Nederhof:
Evaluating research output through life work citation counts. 23-28 - R. A. Leary:
A framework for assessing and rewarding a scientist's research productivity. 29-38 - Hildrun Kretschmer:
Cooperation structure, group size and productivity in research groups. 39-53 - P. R. McAllister, T. Condon:
Econometric analysis of biomedical research publishing patterns. 55-75 - K. Pavitt:
Patent statistics as indicators of innovative activities: Possibilities and problems. 77-99 - Catherine Balog:
The distribution of reference citations in two agricultural journals. 101-104 - Catherine Balog:
Authorship of papers dealing with different subjects in an agricultural journal. 105-109 - András Schubert:
Quantitative studies of science. A current bibliography. 111-117 - Michael J. Moravcsik, Jack Medows:
Book reviews. 119-121 - J. Farkas:
News. 123-131
Volume 7, Numbers 3-6, March 1985
- Michael J. Moravcsik:
Address at the presentation of the first Derek de Solla Price award to Eugene Garfield on December 20, 1984. 143-144 - J. Marton:
Obsolescence or immediacy? Evidence supporting Price's hypothesis. 145-153 - András Schubert, Sándor Zsindely, Tibor Braun:
Scientometric indicators for evaluating medical research output of mid-size countries. 155-163 - Michael J. Moravcsik:
Applied scientometrics: An assessment methodology for developing countries. 165-176 - Barbara Stefaniak:
Periodical literature of information science as reflected in Referativnyj Zhurnal, section 59, informatika. 177-194 - Radosvet Todorov:
Distribution of physics literature. 195-209 - Wolfgang Glänzel, András Schubert:
Price distribution. An exact formulation of Price's "square root law". 211-219 - Daryl E. Chubin:
Beyond invisible colleges: Inspirations and aspirations of post-1972 social studies of science. 221-254 - J. S. Long, R. McGinnis:
The effects of the mentor on the academic career. 255-280 - John Irvine, Ben R. Martin:
Evaluating big science: CERN's past performance and future prospects. 281-308 - Gennady M. Dobrov, V. E. Tonkal:
Comparative analysis and estimation of competence of research units. 309-325 - Manfred Kochen, J. Lansing:
On maps for discovery: Did the periodic table guide elemental discovery? 327-339 - C. Mombers, A. Van Heeringen, R. Van Venetië, Cornelius Le Pair:
Displaying strengths and weaknesses in national R&D performance through document cocitation. 341-355 - N. C. Mullins:
Invisible colleges as science elites. 357-368 - Francis Narin, Elliot Noma:
Is technology becoming science? 369-381 - Elizabeth Smith Aversa:
Citation patterns of highly cited papers and their relationship to literature aging: A study of the working literature. 383-389 - Henry G. Small, E. Sweeney:
Clustering thescience citation index® using co-citations - I. A comparison of methods. 391-409 - H. T. Christovão:
The aging of the literature of biomedical sciences in developed and developing countries. 411-430 - Susan E. Cozzens:
Using the archive: Derek Price's theory of differences among the sciences. 431-441 - Stephen Cole, G. S. Meyer:
Little science, big science revisited. 443-458 - A. I. Yablonsky:
Stable non-Gaussian distributions in scientometrics. 459-470 - Manfred Bonitz:
Journal ranking by selective impact. New method based on SDI results and journal impact factors. 471-485 - Eugene Garfield:
In tribute to Derek John de Solla Price: a citation analysis of little science, big sicence. 487-503 - J. Vlachý:
Citation histories of scientific publications. The data sources. 505-528 - Tibor Braun, Sándor Zsindely:
Growth of scientific literature and the Barnaby Rich effect. 529-530
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