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What does the Information Science community think about new, open methods for publishing, finding, discussing, and measuring our research output? This poster will summarize audience member participation and reaction to an ASIS&T 2011 panel discussing these issues.
Reaction data will consist of several Likert‐scale and open‐ended responses. The data will be collected only a day or two before the...
The scholarly communication ecosystem is changing. Scholars produce and publish a wider range of products than ever before, and scholars and others increasingly interact with these diverse products in new ways within the online ecosystem.
The widespread availability of research products and interaction paths is informing new methods for finding, discussing, measuring, and rewarding diverse types of...
Manual sorting of published journal articles into several pre‐defined subsets for the purpose of qualitative analysis is common practice in social science research. Unfortunately, this can be a time‐consuming process which requires the attention of a subject specialist, and relies on various measures of inter‐rater reliability to ensure that the results are valid and reproducible to serve as a basis...