Loading...
Can Microsoft Academic help to assess the citation impact of academic books?
Kousha, Kayvan ; Thelwall, Mike
Kousha, Kayvan
Thelwall, Mike
Authors
Editors
Other contributors
Affiliation
Epub Date
Issue Date
2018-08-15
Submitted date
Alternative
Abstract
Despite recent evidence that Microsoft Academic is an extensive source of citation counts for journal articles, it is not known if the same is true for academic books. This paper fills this gap by comparing citations to 16,463 books from 2013 to 2016 in the Book Citation Index (BKCI) against automatically extracted citations from Microsoft Academic and Google Books in 17 fields. About 60% of the BKCI books had records in Microsoft Academic, varying by year and field. Citation counts from Microsoft Academic were 1.5 to 3.6 times higher than from BKCI in nine subject areas across all years for books indexed by both. Microsoft Academic found more citations than BKCI because it indexes more scholarly publications and combines citations to different editions and chapters. In contrast, BKCI only found more citations than Microsoft Academic for books in three fields from 2013-2014. Microsoft Academic also found more citations than Google Books in six fields for all years. Thus, Microsoft Academic may be a useful source for the impact assessment of books when comprehensive coverage is not essential.
Citation
Kousha, K., Thelwall, M. 'Can Microsoft Academic help to assess the citation impact of academic books?' Journal of Informetrics, 12 (3) pp. 972-984
Publisher
Journal
Research Unit
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
Embedded videos
Additional Links
Type
Journal article
Language
en
Description
Series/Report no.
ISSN
1751-1577