Competence of Altmetrics in Building the Missing Features of Citation Metrics
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Date
2015-03-12
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INFLIBNET Centre
Abstract
Research output is multidimensional in nature and the existing bibliometric tools fail to cope up with the
growing scope of the research output forms and also have citations as their sole base to evaluate research
impact. Citations indicate the usage of a particular research work formally which reflect only the impact
among the research community while societal impact is totally ignored. Altmetrics tracks heterogeneous
research usages in the online environment which brings impact beyond academia in the picture. Bibliometrics
and altmetrics complement each other in creating a more meaningful research evaluationmetric. Thus, the
missing parts of citations in evaluating research impact like time consuming and fewothers are expected to
be compensated to an extent.With this aim, the paper discusses the limitations of the existing indicators and
how altmetrics can be used to fill few gaps. Sample data fromPLOS ONE journal was collected on Brain
Damage during 2008-09 to prove that article downloads cannot be potentially used for predicting citations.
It was also found that citations and altmetrics do not correlate as they measure different research impacts.
The paper argues that citation counts highlights the work that was used to create knowledge and altmetrics
reflects if the created knowledge was used for the betterment of the society. Therefore, this paper also strongly
concludes that altmetrics cannot be used to predict citations and also states that either altmetrics or
bibliometrics will remain unsolved puzzle in evaluating research output unless they are combined together as
far as the evaluation metrics is concerned.
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Keywords
Altmetrics, Research Impact, Research Evaluation, Citation Forecast