1,504 Matching Annotations
  1. Mar 2025
  2. Apr 2024
  3. Mar 2024
  4. Nov 2023
  5. Oct 2023
  6. Sep 2023
    1. 🔖Características

      Tipo:💻 Software

      Función:🛠️ recuperación y análisis de citas académicas

      Acceso: 🆓libre

      Entidad: 📢Proyecto individual

      Favorito:⭐⭐⭐

      🐦Tiene twitter @AWHarzing


      Twitter

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      @AWHarzing

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      Indicadores

      1. Número total de artículos y número total de citas
      2. Citas promedio por artículo, citas por autor, artículos por autor y citas por año
      3. Índice h de Hirsch y parámetros relacionados
      4. Índice g de Egghe
      5. Índice h contemporáneo
      6. Tres variaciones de índices h individuales
      7. Aumento anual promedio en el índice h individual
      8. Tasa de citas ponderada por edad
      9. Análisis del número de autores por artículo

      Catálogo force11: https://www.force11.org/node/4656

  7. Jan 2023
  8. Nov 2022
  9. May 2021
  10. Apr 2021
    1. Google Scholar [95] (e.g., [96]–[99]) is a service provided by Google (see also [100]), which indexes traditional scientific literature, as well as preprints and “grey” self-archived publications [19] from selected institutional Web site

      Google Scholar: indexa literatura científica, preprints y otras publicaciones de sitios web institucionales selectos

    2. Scopus [88] is a service provided by Reed Elsevier and seems to be the Digital Library with individually the most comprehensive coverage, claiming (June 2008) >33,000,000 records (leaving aside Web pages). As far as linking is concerned, Scopus allows links <1?show=[to]?>to its content using OpenURL [89], which provides a standard syntax for creating URIs. For example, the URI

      Scopus por Reed Elsevier

    3. ubMed [75] is a service provided by the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI). The PubMed database includes more than 17 million citations from more than 19,600 life science journals [76],[77]. The primary mechanism for identifying publications in PubMed is the PubMed identifier (PMID);

      PubMed

    4. URIs for granted, but these humble strings are fundamental to the way the Web works [58] and how libraries can exploit it, so they are a crucial part of the cyberinfrastructure [59] required for e-science on the Web. It is easy to underestimate the value of simple URIs, which can be cited in publications, bookmarked, cut-and-pasted, e-mailed, posted in blogs, added to Web pages and wikis [60]–[62], and indexed by search engines. Simple URIs are a key part of the current Web (version 1.0) and one of the reasons for the Web's phenomenal success since appearing in 1990 [63]. As we shall demonstrate with examples, each digital library has its own style of URI for being linked to (inbound links) and alternative styles of URI for linking out (outbound links) to publisher sites. Some of these links are simple, others more complex, and this has important consequences for both human and programmatic access to the resources these URIs identify.

      Utilidad de las URls

    5. Warmer digital libraries cannot be achieved by software tools alone. The digital libraries themselves can take simple steps to make data and metadata more amenable to human and automated use, making their content more useful and useable

      Útil y utilizable: hacer las bibliotecas más "cálidas" requiere algo más que herramientas de software.

    6. Aunque difieren en tamaño y cobertura, todas estas bibliotecas digitales brindan instalaciones básicas similares para buscar y examinar publicaciones. Estas características están bien documentadas en otros lugares, por lo que no las describiremos en detalle aquí. Con la excepción de arXiv y PubMed Central, que brindan acceso libre total a artículos completos, todas las demás bibliotecas descritas aquí brindan acceso gratuito a metadatos (autor, año, título, revista, resumen, etc.) y enlaces a datos (el texto de un artículo determinado), que el usuario puede o no tener licencia para ver

      Son pocas las bibliotecas digitales que permiten un acceso totalmente libre a los usuarios, lo cual limita la transferencia del conocimiento

    7. Socializationallows users to share their personal collections and see who else isreading the same publications, including added information suchas related papers with the same keyword (or ‘‘tag’’) and what notesother people have written about a given publication.

      Compartir contenido de biblioteca digital, proceso de uso de información en la Web 2.0

    8. exposed and readily available, programmatically and manually,from URIs, HTML [199], and PDF files of publications.Identifying publications.URNs (such as Digital ObjectIdentifiers) should be used toidentify publications whereverpossible. Most large publishers already do this, although there arestill many confounding exceptions.Identifying people.This problem is twofold: people need tobe identified as users of a system and as authors of publications. Totackle the first issue, tools and libraries should use Single Sign On(SSO) schemes, such as OpenID [187] to provide access topersonalized features where possible, as this prevents the endlessand frustrating proliferation of username/passwords to identifyusers in Web applications. The second requires unique authoridentification, an ongoing and as yet unsolved issue for digitallibraries.By following these recommendations, publishers, scientists, andlibraries of all kinds can add significant value to the informationthey manage for the digital library

      Posible soluciones o recomendaciones para mejorar la experiencia en el uso de bibliotecas digitales.

    9. Simple URIs.URIs for human use should be as simple aspossible, to allow easy linking to individual publications and theirauthors. Short URIs are much more likely to be used and cited[192] than longer, more complicated URIs.Persistent URIs.It has been noted many times before[193,194], but it is worth repeatedly restating: persistent URIsmake digital libraries a much more useful and usable place.Although URIs will inevitably decay [195,196], many (but not all)will be preserved by the Internet Archive [197,198], and everyeffort should be made to keep them persistent where possible.Exposing metadata.Publication metadata, in whatever style(EndNote, BibTeX, XML, RDF, etc.), should be transparently

      Recomendaciones

    10. the size, coverage, and style of metadata used (summarized in Table 1and Figure 2). Where available, DOIs can be used to retrievemetadata for a given publication using a DOI resolver such asCrossRef [57], a linking system developed by a consortium ofpublishers. We illustrate with specific examples how URIs and DOIsare used by each library to identify, name, and locate resources,particularly individual publications and their author(s). We often takeURIs for granted, but these humble strings are fundamental to theway the Web works [58] and how libraries can exploit it, so they area crucial part of the cyberinfrastructure [59] required for e-scienceon the Web. It is easy to underestimate the value of simple URIs,which can be cited in publications, bookmarked, cut-and-pasted, e-mailed, posted in blogs, added to Web pages and wikis [60–62], andindexed by search engines. Simple URIs are a key part of the currentWeb (version 1.0) and one of the reasons for the Web’s phenomenalsuccess since appearing in 1990 [63]. As we shall demonstrate withexamples, each digital library has its own style of URI for beinglinked to (inbound links) and alternative styles of URI for linking out(outbound links) to publisher sites. Some of these links are simple,others more complex, and this has important consequences for bothhuman and programmatic access to the resources these URIsidentify.The ACM Digital Library.The Association for ComputingMachinery (ACM), probably best known for the Turing award,makes their digital library available on the Web [64]. The librarycurrently contains more than 54,000 articles from 30 journals and900 conference proceedings dating back to 1947, focusingprimarily on computer science. Like many other largepublishers, the ACM uses Digital Object Identifiers (DOI) toidentify publications. So, for example, a publication on scientificworkflows [65] from the 16th International World Wide WebConference (WWW2007) is identified by the Digital ObjectFigure 1. A mind map[207]summarizing the contents of this article in a convenient manner.doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000204.g001

      Mapa mental del contenido del artículo. Todo en relación a tomar ventaja (descongelar) las colecciones de información (bibliotecas digitales) y las limitaciones actuales que enfrenta la parte informática y los usuarios.

  11. Dec 2020
  12. Nov 2020
    1. RecommendationsWarmer digital libraries cannot be achieved by software tools alone. The digital libraries themselves can take simple steps to make data and metadata more amenable to human and automated use, making their content more useful and useable. Only with proper and better access to linked data and metadata can the tools that computational biologists require be built. We make the following recommendations to achieve this goal.

      Simple URIs Persistent URIs Exposing metadata Identifying publications Identifying people

    2. Some Tools for Defrosting LibrariesAlthough libraries can be cold, the tools described in this section could potentially make them much warmer. They do this in two main ways. Personalization allows users to say this is my library, the sources I am interested in, my collection of references, as well as literature I have authored or co-authored

      Zotero.org and Mendeley MyNCBI Mekentosj Papers CiteULike.org Connotea.org HubMed.org

    3. highlights some problems with using current digital libraries, for both humans and machines. In particular, see the following list. Identity Crisis. There is no universal method to retrieve a given paper, because there is no single way of identifying publications across all digital libraries on the Web. Although various identification schemes such as the PubMed identifier (PMID), Digital Object Identifier (DOI), ISBN, and many others, exist, there is not yet one identity system to “rule them all.” Get Metadata. Publication metadata often gets “divorced” from the data it is about, and this forces users to manage each independently, a cumbersome and error-prone process. Most PDF files, for example, do not contain embedded metadata that can be easily extracted [110]. Likewise, for publications on the Web there is no universal method to retrieve metadata. For any given publication, it is not possible for a machine or human to retrieve metadata using a standard method. Instead there are many inadequate options to choose from, which add unnecessary complexity to obtaining accurate metadata. Which metadata? There is no single way of representing metadata, and without adherence to common standards (which largely already exist, but in a plurality) there never will be. EndNote (RIS) and BibTeX are common, but again, neither format is used universally across all libraries.

    4. Define el contenido del articulo: desde la búsqueda de la información, cómo están organizadas las bibliotecas digitales, con el uso de los DOIs y URIs, los problemas de la identificación de metadatos durante la búsqueda y utilización, las herramientas para acceso a las bibliotecas y lo que en un futuro (nuestro presente); hasta las recomendaciones para un mejor uso de las bibliotecas: identificación de publicaciones y las personas; y los obstáculos aún presentes de cómo identificar la información más adecuada y compartirla.