Authors
Vincent Larivière, Cassidy R Sugimoto, Blaise Cronin
Publication date
2012/5
Journal
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Volume
63
Issue
5
Pages
997-1016
Description
This paper presents a condensed history of Library and Information Science (LIS) over the course of more than a century using a variety of bibliometric measures. It examines in detail the variable rate of knowledge production in the field, shifts in subject coverage, the dominance of particular publication genres at different times, prevailing modes of production, interactions with other disciplines, and, more generally, observes how the field has evolved. It shows that, despite a striking growth in the number of journals, papers, and contributing authors, a decrease was observed in the field's market‐share of all social science and humanities research. Collaborative authorship is now the norm, a pattern seen across the social sciences. The idea of boundary crossing was also examined: in 2010, nearly 60% of authors who published in LIS also published in another discipline. This high degree of permeability in LIS was …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
V Larivière, CR Sugimoto, B Cronin - Journal of the American Society for Information Science …, 2012