Boudry Christophe
Media Normandie, Normandy University, University of Caen Basse-Normandie, Caen Cedex, France.
Med 2 0. 2015 Apr 1;4(1):e2. doi: 10.2196/med20.3628.
The World Wide Web has changed research habits, and these changes were further expanded when "Web 2.0" became popular in 2005. Bibliometrics is a helpful tool used for describing patterns of publication, for interpreting progression over time, and the geographical distribution of research in a given field. Few studies employing bibliometrics, however, have been carried out on the correlative nature of scientific literature and Web 2.0.
The aim of this bibliometric analysis was to provide an overview of Web 2.0 implications in the biomedical literature. The objectives were to assess the growth rate of literature, key journals, authors, and country contributions, and to evaluate whether the various Web 2.0 applications were expressed within this biomedical literature, and if so, how.
A specific query with keywords chosen to be representative of Web 2.0 applications was built for the PubMed database. Articles related to Web 2.0 were downloaded in Extensible Markup Language (XML) and were processed through developed hypertext preprocessor (PHP) scripts, then imported to Microsoft Excel 2010 for data processing.
A total of 1347 articles were included in this study. The number of articles related to Web 2.0 has been increasing from 2002 to 2012 (average annual growth rate was 106.3% with a maximum of 333% in 2005). The United States was by far the predominant country for authors, with 514 articles (54.0%; 514/952). The second and third most productive countries were the United Kingdom and Australia, with 87 (9.1%; 87/952) and 44 articles (4.6%; 44/952), respectively. Distribution of number of articles per author showed that the core population of researchers working on Web 2.0 in the medical field could be estimated at approximately 75. In total, 614 journals were identified during this analysis. Using Bradford's law, 27 core journals were identified, among which three (Studies in Health Technology and Informatics, Journal of Medical Internet Research, and Nucleic Acids Research) produced more than 35 articles related to Web 2.0 over the period studied. A total of 274 words in the field of Web 2.0 were found after manual sorting of the 15,878 words appearing in title and abstract fields for articles. Word frequency analysis reveals "blog" as the most recurrent, followed by "wiki", "Web 2.0", "social media", "Facebook", "social networks", "blogger", "cloud computing", "Twitter", and "blogging". All categories of Web 2.0 applications were found, indicating the successful integration of Web 2.0 into the biomedical field.
This study shows that the biomedical community is engaged in the use of Web 2.0 and confirms its high level of interest in these tools. Therefore, changes in the ways researchers use information seem to be far from over.
万维网改变了研究习惯,当“Web 2.0”在2005年流行起来时,这些变化进一步扩大。文献计量学是一种有用的工具,用于描述出版物模式、解释随时间的进展以及给定领域研究的地理分布。然而,很少有采用文献计量学的研究针对科学文献与Web 2.0的相关性进行。
本文献计量分析旨在概述Web 2.0在生物医学文献中的影响。目标是评估文献的增长率、关键期刊、作者和国家贡献,并评估各种Web 2.0应用是否在该生物医学文献中有所体现,若有体现,则评估其体现方式。
为PubMed数据库构建了一个特定查询,所选关键词代表Web 2.0应用。与Web 2.0相关的文章以可扩展标记语言(XML)下载,并通过开发的超文本预处理器(PHP)脚本进行处理,然后导入到Microsoft Excel 2010进行数据处理。
本研究共纳入1347篇文章。2002年至2012年期间,与Web 2.0相关的文章数量一直在增加(年均增长率为106.3%,2005年最高达333%)。美国是作者数量最多的国家,有514篇文章(54.0%;514/952)。第二和第三大高产国家分别是英国和澳大利亚,分别有87篇(9.1%;87/952)和44篇文章(4.6%;44/952)。每位作者的文章数量分布表明,医学领域从事Web 2.0研究的核心研究人员群体估计约为75人。在此分析过程中总共识别出614种期刊。根据布拉德福德定律,确定了27种核心期刊,其中三种(《卫生技术与信息学研究》《医学互联网研究杂志》和《核酸研究》)在研究期间发表了35篇以上与Web 2.0相关的文章。对文章标题和摘要字段中出现的15878个单词进行人工分类后,在Web 2.0领域共发现274个单词。词频分析显示“博客”出现频率最高,其次是“维基”“Web 2.0”“社交媒体”“脸书”“社交网络”“博主”“云计算”“推特”和“博客写作”。发现了所有类别的Web 2.0应用,表明Web 2.0已成功融入生物医学领域。
本研究表明生物医学界正在使用Web 2.0,并证实了其对这些工具的高度兴趣。因此,研究人员使用信息方式的变化似乎远未结束。