Safemetrics分享 http://blog.sciencenet.cn/u/jerrycueb 以勤奋、谦虚、严谨、规范、持久的习惯和态度做安全科学研究。 'Wonder en is gheen Wonder'

博文

Bibliometrics and Research Evaluation

已有 2081 次阅读 2017-3-12 17:10 |个人分类:知识图谱|系统分类:科研笔记

Bibliometrics and Research Evaluation
Uses and Abuses
Overview

The research evaluation market is booming. “Ranking,” “metrics,” “h-index,” and “impact factors” are reigning buzzwords. Government and research administrators want to evaluate everything—teachers, professors, training programs, universities—using quantitative indicators. Among the tools used to measure “research excellence,” bibliometrics—aggregate data on publications and citations—has become dominant. Bibliometrics is hailed as an “objective” measure of research quality, a quantitative measure more useful than “subjective” and intuitive evaluation methods such as peer review that have been used since scientific papers were first published in the seventeenth century. In this book, Yves Gingras offers a spirited argument against an unquestioning reliance on bibliometrics as an indicator of research quality. Gingras shows that bibliometric rankings have no real scientific validity, rarely measuring what they pretend to.

Although the study of publication and citation patterns, at the proper scales, can yield insights on the global dynamics of science over time, ill-defined quantitative indicators often generate perverse and unintended effects on the direction of research. Moreover, abuse of bibliometrics occurs when data is manipulated to boost rankings. Gingras looks at the politics of evaluation and argues that using numbers can be a way to control scientists and diminish their autonomy in the evaluation process. Proposing precise criteria for establishing the validity of indicators at a given scale of analysis, Gingras questions why universities are so eager to let invalid indicators influence their research strategy.

About the Author

Yves Gingras is Professor and Canada Research Chair in History and Sociology of Science, Department of History, at Université du Québec à Montréal.

Endorsements
Bibliometrics and Research Evaluation takes the reader through the challenges surrounding the use of quantitative indicators in research evaluation, considers the reasons behind their current misuse, and offers proposals and examples of the contributions that indicators can make to the analysis of the dynamics of science and to the evidence base for research policy. It provides a cautionary account that needs to be read by all those involved in the management of research, and who are perhaps being tempted by the promise that easy-to-access and easy-to-interpret indicators will deliver them from the need to make difficult decisions under conditions of uncertainty. It also provides an invaluable primer on the use of indicators in research evaluation for all those considering a research career in these fields. Finally, it will become a work of reference, and a very enjoyable read, for all those who, because of their work, may be better acquainted with the arguments it develops.”
Jordi Molas-Gallart, Professor, Spanish National Research Council (CSIC)
“From RG Scores, to Altmetric, SciVal, Author Rank, and h-indexes—to be a scholar today is to participate in a wild economy of metrics poised to exert wide-reaching and intimate control over the valuation of knowledge. Gingras’s manifesto calls academics to put to the test such data-driven indicators by asking, ‘what is the proper measure of a metric?’”
Jean-François Blanchette, Associate Professor, Department of Information Studies, UCLA

Bibliometrics and Research .uation



https://blog.sciencenet.cn/blog-554179-1039034.html

上一篇:BibExcel+Pajek
下一篇:CiteSpace 5.0.R5 is available to download
收藏 IP: 192.241.187.*| 热度|

1 许培扬

该博文允许注册用户评论 请点击登录 评论 (0 个评论)

数据加载中...

Archiver|手机版|科学网 ( 京ICP备07017567号-12 )

GMT+8, 2024-3-29 09:19

Powered by ScienceNet.cn

Copyright © 2007- 中国科学报社

返回顶部