As Web 2.0 is changing the way of scholarly discussion and the measurements of journal articles impact, altmetrics have garnered much attention in recent years. Altmetrics measure the scholarly impact of journal articles based on how a research study is obtained, read, discussed, shared, and recommended on social media platforms among a variety of audiences. The purpose of this study is to understand the similarities and differences between the Twitter users who tweet on journal articles in psychology and political science disciplines. The data for this study was collected from Web of Science, Altmetric.com and Twitter. A total of 91,826 tweets with 22,541 distinct Twitter user profiles for psychology discipline and 29,958 tweets from 10,47...
Although counts of tweets citing academic papers are used as an informal indicator of interest, litt...
Enthusiasm for using Twitter as a source of data in the social sciences extends to measuring the imp...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by SAGE in Journal of Information Science on ...
As Web 2.0 is changing the way of scholarly discussion and the measurements of journal articles impa...
In this study we examined who tweeted academic articles that had at least one Finnish author or co-a...
The purpose of this paper is to understand the profiles of users and their motivations in sharing re...
Purpose: By analyzing journal articles with high citation counts but low Twitter mentions and vice v...
At present, growing numbers of researchers are interacting with different social media tools such a...
Altmetrics is a new bibliometric subfield that uses data from online platforms and social and mainst...
The aim of this study is to characterize both Twitter users and their interactions around scholarly ...
This paper investigates disciplinary differences in how researchers use the microblogging site Twitt...
To disseminate research, scholars once relied on university media services or journal press releases...
Changes are occurring in scholarly communication as scientific discourse and research activities spr...
Metrics derived from Twitter and other social media-often referred to as altmetrics-are increasingly...
The relationship between traditional metrics of research impact (e.g., number of citations) and alte...
Although counts of tweets citing academic papers are used as an informal indicator of interest, litt...
Enthusiasm for using Twitter as a source of data in the social sciences extends to measuring the imp...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by SAGE in Journal of Information Science on ...
As Web 2.0 is changing the way of scholarly discussion and the measurements of journal articles impa...
In this study we examined who tweeted academic articles that had at least one Finnish author or co-a...
The purpose of this paper is to understand the profiles of users and their motivations in sharing re...
Purpose: By analyzing journal articles with high citation counts but low Twitter mentions and vice v...
At present, growing numbers of researchers are interacting with different social media tools such a...
Altmetrics is a new bibliometric subfield that uses data from online platforms and social and mainst...
The aim of this study is to characterize both Twitter users and their interactions around scholarly ...
This paper investigates disciplinary differences in how researchers use the microblogging site Twitt...
To disseminate research, scholars once relied on university media services or journal press releases...
Changes are occurring in scholarly communication as scientific discourse and research activities spr...
Metrics derived from Twitter and other social media-often referred to as altmetrics-are increasingly...
The relationship between traditional metrics of research impact (e.g., number of citations) and alte...
Although counts of tweets citing academic papers are used as an informal indicator of interest, litt...
Enthusiasm for using Twitter as a source of data in the social sciences extends to measuring the imp...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by SAGE in Journal of Information Science on ...