tea.mathoverflow.net - Discussion Feed (Stats on publishing and citing) 2018-11-04T13:52:19-08:00 http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/ Lussumo Vanilla & Feed Publisher Nilima comments on "Stats on publishing and citing" (14849) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1003/stats-on-publishing-and-citing/?Focus=14849#Comment_14849 2011-07-02T09:36:39-07:00 2018-11-04T13:52:19-08:00 Nilima http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/558/ an_mo_user, that's a great start, thanks! an_mo_user comments on "Stats on publishing and citing" (14848) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1003/stats-on-publishing-and-citing/?Focus=14848#Comment_14848 2011-07-02T09:15:44-07:00 2018-11-04T13:52:19-08:00 an_mo_user http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/491/ Nilima, while I am afraid it does not address your question directly either, perhaps the following question, by Andy Putman, and its answers are interesting to you ...
http://mathoverflow.net/questions/3512/top-specialized-journals]]>
Nilima comments on "Stats on publishing and citing" (14847) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1003/stats-on-publishing-and-citing/?Focus=14847#Comment_14847 2011-07-02T08:44:23-07:00 2018-11-04T13:52:19-08:00 Nilima http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/558/ I have a related question:Where can I locate reputable lists, by MSC or MO major tags, of what the community considers major journals in those areas? My need is too local, and the question too broad, ...
Where can I locate reputable lists, by MSC or MO major tags, of what the community considers major journals in those areas?

My need is too local, and the question too broad, to post on MO, so I don't think I can post there. However, the need is real, so any advice on where to seek the answer is welcome.

The Canadian federal science funding agency (NSERC) is going through a 'reallocation' exercise, in which it determines how much money to spend on what discipline. It has decided to rely on a report being written now, which aims to 'compare' between disciplines. The comparison is based on a rather crude metric derived from bibliometric data called the 'Average Research Impact Factor (ARIF)' with 1 being 'average', and 'Relative ARIF', being ARIF - 1. Someone is using Thompson Reuters to generate a list of 'top N journals in all math+stats' by citation measures, which are then incorporated into the report. Unsurprisingly, journals on econometrics makes this cut when N=10 or 20, whilst other major journals do not.

Canadian Mathematics+Statistics is the only discipline which apparently has negative R-ARIF. The funding for basic research in Mathematics and Statistics has been cut over the last exercise, and will most likely be cut again. There's outrage and squabbling over how grants are reviewed, http://nghoussoub.com/ but the source problem- underfunding- remains relatively unaddressed.

We (mathematicians in Canada) need to coherently and rather quickly point out the methodological fallacies in how these metric are computed, but more importantly, suggest other measures. Unfortunately, these measures have to be simple enough for non-scientists to compute. I was looking, therefore, for lists of 'top 10 journals' by major MSC category, where the ranking was decided by mathematicians (and not simply by IF). Handing over rank-ordered lists by subdiscipline where the ordering is 'agreed' upon by mathematicians is a lesser evil than having such a list thrust upon us. It currently is.

Unfortunately, I haven't been able to find such lists. There are lots of lists by lots of people, but I'm not sure which are considered authoritative, say, in algebraic geometry. I looked at Scott's question on MO. That got lots of interesting answers, but none that quite address what I'm looking for.

Any pointers welcome.]]>
Scott Morrison comments on "Stats on publishing and citing" (13922) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1003/stats-on-publishing-and-citing/?Focus=13922#Comment_13922 2011-04-01T19:53:20-07:00 2018-11-04T13:52:19-08:00 Scott Morrison http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/3/ As another data point, I've also (long in the past) received permission from the mathscinet IT people to make on the order of 10k requests per day from a specified IP address... So they are willing ... As another data point, I've also (long in the past) received permission from the mathscinet IT people to make on the order of 10k requests per day from a specified IP address... So they are willing to accommodate requests!

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Will Jagy comments on "Stats on publishing and citing" (13915) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1003/stats-on-publishing-and-citing/?Focus=13915#Comment_13915 2011-04-01T13:08:44-07:00 2018-11-04T13:52:19-08:00 Will Jagy http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/208/ Scott and Mariano, I have successfully asked narrowly focussed questions of the AMS Math Reviews editors, long in the past. As I suspect Mariano has done, I think a particular question ... Mariano comments on "Stats on publishing and citing" (13914) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1003/stats-on-publishing-and-citing/?Focus=13914#Comment_13914 2011-04-01T12:33:13-07:00 2018-11-04T13:52:19-08:00 Mariano http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/61/ I've wrote to both the MathSciNet and the Zentralblatt editors asking... I may be being to naïve, though. I've wrote to both the MathSciNet and the Zentralblatt editors asking... I may be being to naïve, though.

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Scott Morrison comments on "Stats on publishing and citing" (13912) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1003/stats-on-publishing-and-citing/?Focus=13912#Comment_13912 2011-04-01T12:21:21-07:00 2018-11-04T13:52:19-08:00 Scott Morrison http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/3/ The question is now here by the way. I really like the side question of ---- how could we convince the AMS to open up the mathscinet database? The question is now here by the way.

I really like the side question of ---- how could we convince the AMS to open up the mathscinet database?

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Mariano comments on "Stats on publishing and citing" (13898) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1003/stats-on-publishing-and-citing/?Focus=13898#Comment_13898 2011-03-31T20:43:21-07:00 2018-11-04T13:52:19-08:00 Mariano http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/61/ Ok, I'll go and ask. @theo, can you add that as an answer? Ok, I'll go and ask.

@theo, can you add that as an answer?

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theo_b comments on "Stats on publishing and citing" (13897) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1003/stats-on-publishing-and-citing/?Focus=13897#Comment_13897 2011-03-31T19:56:10-07:00 2018-11-04T13:52:19-08:00 theo_b http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/530/ I just wanted to point out that there was an article Topical Bias in Generalist Mathematics Journals by Joseph F. Grcar in the december 2010 issue of the Notices of the AMS. According to the text, ... I just wanted to point out that there was an article Topical Bias in Generalist Mathematics Journals by Joseph F. Grcar in the december 2010 issue of the Notices of the AMS. According to the text, the statistics are based on 854,547 entries from the 2000-2009 period of the Zentralblatt database. I am aware that this is not quite what you're looking for and unfortunately the article remains silent on exactly how the data was gathered, but it might be a starting point.

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Andy Putman comments on "Stats on publishing and citing" (13896) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1003/stats-on-publishing-and-citing/?Focus=13896#Comment_13896 2011-03-31T19:11:03-07:00 2018-11-04T13:52:19-08:00 Andy Putman http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/113/ I also agree that it is a reasonable question for the main site, especially given that it is looking for actual data (rather than just hearsay or speculation). I'd be very interested in the answers! Kevin Walker comments on "Stats on publishing and citing" (13892) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1003/stats-on-publishing-and-citing/?Focus=13892#Comment_13892 2011-03-31T18:43:45-07:00 2018-11-04T13:52:19-08:00 Kevin Walker http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/36/ I agree that it's a reasonable question for the main site. Mariano comments on "Stats on publishing and citing" (13891) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1003/stats-on-publishing-and-citing/?Focus=13891#Comment_13891 2011-03-31T18:40:38-07:00 2018-11-04T13:52:19-08:00 Mariano http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/61/ With a little more encouragement I can repost this on MO :) With a little more encouragement I can repost this on MO :)

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Qiaochu Yuan comments on "Stats on publishing and citing" (13889) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1003/stats-on-publishing-and-citing/?Focus=13889#Comment_13889 2011-03-31T18:10:16-07:00 2018-11-04T13:52:19-08:00 Qiaochu Yuan http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/13/ This seems like a reasonable question for the main site. This seems like a reasonable question for the main site.

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Mariano comments on "Stats on publishing and citing" (13888) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/1003/stats-on-publishing-and-citing/?Focus=13888#Comment_13888 2011-03-31T18:04:12-07:00 2018-11-04T13:52:19-08:00 Mariano http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/61/ Let me abuse meta.MO a bit. In the context of some discussions we are having at my university, it has become evident that some statistical information regarding publishing practices in mathematics ... Let me abuse meta.MO a bit.

In the context of some discussions we are having at my university, it has become evident that some statistical information regarding publishing practices in mathematics would be necessary to proceed---you know, facts. In particular, I would be immensely happy to know if there are measurable and measured differences in the number of papers published by people working in different areas (think PDEs v. Algebraic Geometry v. Number theory v. Combinatorics; top level MSC groups, say); if there are measurable and measured differences in the number of citations gotten by papers in each area; and so on. Google has pointed to studies in which such comparisons are made between different disciplines (mathematics v. chemistry, say) but not at all between areas of mathematics.

Can anyone point to such information?

(I would love to get hold of MathSciNet's raw tables to compute such things... I doubt that is accessible, though)

I ask this here because I suspect the subject interests a few of the meta.MO regulars, who might help me; I don't think the question is MO material (although I believe it is relevant to mathematicians!)

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