Although there is evidence that counting the readers of an article in the social reference site, Mendeley, may help to capture its research impact, the extent to which this is true for different scientific fields is unknown. In this study, we compare Mendeley readership counts with citations for different social sciences and humanities disciplines. The overall correlation between Mendeley readership counts and citations for the social sciences was higher than for the humanities. Low and medium correlations between Mendeley bookmarks and citation counts in all the investigated disciplines suggest that these measures reflect different aspects of research impact. Mendeley data were also used to discover patterns of information flow between sci...
Although Mendeley bookmarking counts appear to correlate moderately with conventional citation metri...
<p>In this study, the presence and distribution of both Mendeley readerships (usage) and Web of Scie...
Although Mendeley bookmarking counts appear to correlate moderately with conventional citation metri...
Although there is evidence that counting the readers of an article in the social reference site, Men...
There is some evidence that counting the readers of an article in the social reference site, Mendele...
Scientists and managers using citation-based indicators to help evaluate research cannot evaluate re...
Little detailed information is known about who reads research articles and the contexts in which res...
Medical research is highly funded and often expensive and so is particularly important to evaluate e...
Little detailed information is known about who reads research articles and the contexts in which res...
The online reference manager tool Mendeley (http://www.mendeley.com/) is one of the most promising t...
The main focus of this paper is to investigate the impact of publications read (saved) by the diff...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Taylor and Francis in Journal of the Assoc...
The present study was carried out to find out the association between Mendeley readership count and ...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Sage in Journal of Librarianship and Inf...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Association for Information Science and Te...
Although Mendeley bookmarking counts appear to correlate moderately with conventional citation metri...
<p>In this study, the presence and distribution of both Mendeley readerships (usage) and Web of Scie...
Although Mendeley bookmarking counts appear to correlate moderately with conventional citation metri...
Although there is evidence that counting the readers of an article in the social reference site, Men...
There is some evidence that counting the readers of an article in the social reference site, Mendele...
Scientists and managers using citation-based indicators to help evaluate research cannot evaluate re...
Little detailed information is known about who reads research articles and the contexts in which res...
Medical research is highly funded and often expensive and so is particularly important to evaluate e...
Little detailed information is known about who reads research articles and the contexts in which res...
The online reference manager tool Mendeley (http://www.mendeley.com/) is one of the most promising t...
The main focus of this paper is to investigate the impact of publications read (saved) by the diff...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Taylor and Francis in Journal of the Assoc...
The present study was carried out to find out the association between Mendeley readership count and ...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Sage in Journal of Librarianship and Inf...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Association for Information Science and Te...
Although Mendeley bookmarking counts appear to correlate moderately with conventional citation metri...
<p>In this study, the presence and distribution of both Mendeley readerships (usage) and Web of Scie...
Although Mendeley bookmarking counts appear to correlate moderately with conventional citation metri...