Online attention to digital humanities publications
Priego, E., Havemann, L. & Atenas, J. (2014). Online attention to digital humanities publications ..
Abstract
e suggest altmetrics services like the Altmetric Explorer can be an efficient method to obtain bibliographic datasets and track scholarly outputs being mentioned online in the sources curated by these services. Our dataset reflects that outputs with “digital humanities” in their metadata were not published in fully-fledged Open Access journals. The role of SSRN and arXiv as open repositories was found to be relatively significant, but the licensing of the outputs available through them was not always immediately clearly displayed. Our working definition of "Open Access" requires outputs to be open for human and machine access through CC-BY or at least CC-BY-SA. The absence of clear licensing information at output level is perceived to be problematic, as is the lack of any outputs clearly and visibly licensed with CC-BY. The fact the 3 most-mentioned outputs in the dataset were available without a paywall might signal towards the potential of Open Access for greater public impact. ‘Free access’ outputs in paywalled journals did not reflect higher mentions nor citations than their paywalled or non-paywalled counterparts. Though the dataset reflects a predictable dominance of authors based in the USA, the dataset points towards a growing presence of international digital humanities researchers.
Publication Type: | Poster |
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Additional Information: | All presentations and posters for the DH Congress are peer reviewed prior to acceptance. |
Publisher Keywords: | altmetrics; bibliometrics; digital humanities; scholarly publishing |
Subjects: | Z Bibliography. Library Science. Information Resources > Z665 Library Science. Information Science |
Departments: | School of Science & Technology > Computer Science > Human Computer Interaction Design |
Available under License Creative Commons: Attribution 2.0.
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