martes, 22 de octubre de 2013

Un mapeo de documentos indexados en Scopus

Scopus Maps


The base map of aggregated citation relations among 19,600 journals in Scopus during 2012 is as follows:



Figure 1: Base map of aggregated citation relations among 19,600 journals included in Scopus 2012; colors correspond to 27 communities distinguished by VOSviewer; This map can be web-started at http://www.Vosviewer.com/Vosviewer.php?map=http://www.leydesdorff.net/scopus12/basemap.txt


One can generate an overlay for any set downloaded from Scopus as follows:


· Search in Scopus (advanced or basic); for example, using the search string ‘TITLE(“humanities computing”) OR TITLE(“computational humanities”) OR TITLE(“digital humanities”) OR TITLE(“ehumanities”) OR TITLE(“e-humanities”)’ provided 114 documents on October 8, 2013;

· Make a possible selection of records among the retrieved documents or tick “All”;

· Click on “Export”;

· Among the output formats, choose the “RIS format (Reference Manager, Procite, Endnote)” and “Specify fields to be exported”;

· Only “Source titles” should be exported; untick all other fields;

· Click on “Export”: the file “scopus.ris” can be saved; for example, for the 114 records mentioned;

· Save the file “scopus.ris” in the same folder as the routine overlay.exe and the file with the mapping information scopus.dbf (right-click for saving this file). One can paste different (e.g., sequential) output files of Scopus into a single file, but the routine expects an input file with the name “scopus.ris”.

· One can now run overlay.exe in that same folder; preferably from the C-prompt; (using the C-prompt, one obtains error messages);

· The file “overlay.txt” (e.g., ehum.txt) is a map file that can be opened in VOSviewer;

· Rao-Stirling diversity is stored in the file “rao.txt” and shown on the screen; overlay.dbf contains the information such as the number of publications in each journal.



The resulting overlay map reads as follows:


Figure 2: Overlay of 114 documents with the search string ‘TITLE(“humanities computing”) OR TITLE(“computational humanities”) OR TITLE(“digital humanities”) OR TITLE(“ehumanities”) OR TITLE(“e-humanities”)’ in Scopus; Rao-Stirling diversity = 0.1244. This map can be web-started at http://www.Vosviewer.com/Vosviewer.php?map=http://www.leydesdorff.net/scopus12/ehum.txt&label_size=1.35


See for more explanation: Loet Leydesdorff, Félix de Moya-Anegón, and Vicente P. Guerrero-Bote, “Journal Maps, Interactive Overlays, and the Measurement of Interdisciplinarity on the basis of Scopus data” (in preparation).

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