Arts and Humanities Literature: Bibliometric Characteristics of Contributions by Turkish Authors
Özet
Scholarly communication in arts and humanities differs
from that in the sciences. Arts and humanities scholars
rely primarily on monographs as a medium of publication
whereas scientists consider articles that appear in scholarly journals as the single most important publication
outlet. The number of journal citation studies in arts and
humanities is therefore limited. In this article, we
investigate the bibliometric characteristics of 507arts
and humanities journal articles written by authors affiliated with Turkish institutions and indexed in the Arts &
Humanities Citation Index (A&HCI) between the years
1975–2003. Journal articles constituted more than 60% of
all publications. One third of all contributions were published during the last 4 years (1999–2003) and appeared in 16 different journals. An overwhelming majority of contributions (91%) were written in English, and 83% of them had single authorship. Researchers based at Turkish universities produced 90% of all publications. Two
thirds of references in publications were to monographs.
The median age of all references was 12 years. Eighty
percent of publications authored by Turkish arts and
humanities scholars were not cited at all while the remaining 20% (or 99 publications) were cited 304 times (an average of three citations per publication). Self-citation
ratio was 31%. Two thirds of the cited publications were
cited for the first time within 2 years of their publications.
Bağlantı
http://bby.hacettepe.edu.tr/yayinlar/tonta-al-sahiner-jasist-2006.pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/11655/10037