Citation data have remained hidden behind proprietary, restrictive licensing agreements, which raises barriers to entry for analysts wishing to use the data, increases the expense of performing large-scale analyses, and reduces the robustness and reproducibility of the conclusions. For the past several years, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Office of Portfolio Analysis (OPA) has been aggregating and enhancing citation data that can be shared publicly. Here, we describe the NIH Open Citation Collection (NIH-OCC), a public access database for biomedical research that is made freely available to the community. This dataset, which has been carefully generated from unrestricted data sources such as MedLine, PubMed Central (PMC), and Cros...
Science is progressive, and every discovery, set of data, and publication builds on previous work. T...
Purpose To examine whether National Institutes of Health (NIH) funded articles that were archived in...
Conventional citation indexes, such as Web of Science and Scopus, require subscription and only incl...
This is a database snapshot of the iCite web service (provided here as a single zipped CSV file, or ...
This is a database snapshot of the iCite web service (provided here as a single zipped CSV file, or ...
This is a database snapshot of the iCite web service (provided here as a single zipped CSV file, or ...
This is a database snapshot of the iCite web service (provided here as a single zipped CSV file, or ...
This is a database snapshot of the iCite web service (provided here as a single zipped CSV file, or ...
This is a database snapshot of the iCite web service (provided here as a single zipped CSV file, or ...
This is a database snapshot of the iCite web service (provided here as a single zipped CSV file, or ...
To examine whether National Institutes of Health (NIH) funded articles that were archived in PubMed ...
This is an exploration of the efforts to promote open access (OA) to publicly funded scholarly resea...
In 2008, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) mandated that the full text of NIH-supported articl...
This study seeks to measure the impact of the NIH policy in terms of whether open access articles ar...
Purpose To examine whether National Institutes of Health (NIH) funded articles that were archived ...
Science is progressive, and every discovery, set of data, and publication builds on previous work. T...
Purpose To examine whether National Institutes of Health (NIH) funded articles that were archived in...
Conventional citation indexes, such as Web of Science and Scopus, require subscription and only incl...
This is a database snapshot of the iCite web service (provided here as a single zipped CSV file, or ...
This is a database snapshot of the iCite web service (provided here as a single zipped CSV file, or ...
This is a database snapshot of the iCite web service (provided here as a single zipped CSV file, or ...
This is a database snapshot of the iCite web service (provided here as a single zipped CSV file, or ...
This is a database snapshot of the iCite web service (provided here as a single zipped CSV file, or ...
This is a database snapshot of the iCite web service (provided here as a single zipped CSV file, or ...
This is a database snapshot of the iCite web service (provided here as a single zipped CSV file, or ...
To examine whether National Institutes of Health (NIH) funded articles that were archived in PubMed ...
This is an exploration of the efforts to promote open access (OA) to publicly funded scholarly resea...
In 2008, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) mandated that the full text of NIH-supported articl...
This study seeks to measure the impact of the NIH policy in terms of whether open access articles ar...
Purpose To examine whether National Institutes of Health (NIH) funded articles that were archived ...
Science is progressive, and every discovery, set of data, and publication builds on previous work. T...
Purpose To examine whether National Institutes of Health (NIH) funded articles that were archived in...
Conventional citation indexes, such as Web of Science and Scopus, require subscription and only incl...