Semantic Web for Reliable Citation Analysis in Scholarly Publishing

Analysis of the impact of scholarly artifacts is constrained by current unreliable practices in cross-referencing, citation discovering, and citation indexing and analysis, which have not kept pace with the technological advances that are occurring in several areas like knowledge management and secu...

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Main Authors: Ruben Tous, Manel Guerrero, Jaime Delgado
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Library Association 2011-03-01
Series:Information Technology and Libraries
Online Access:https://ejournals.bc.edu/ojs/index.php/ital/article/view/3042
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spelling doaj-42ba167e86ec413e972593846e1497c92020-11-24T23:50:24ZengAmerican Library AssociationInformation Technology and Libraries0730-92952163-52262011-03-01301243310.6017/ital.v30i1.30422711Semantic Web for Reliable Citation Analysis in Scholarly PublishingRuben TousManel GuerreroJaime DelgadoAnalysis of the impact of scholarly artifacts is constrained by current unreliable practices in cross-referencing, citation discovering, and citation indexing and analysis, which have not kept pace with the technological advances that are occurring in several areas like knowledge management and security. Because citation analysis has become the primary component in scholarly impact factor calculation, and considering the relevance of this metric within both the scholarly publishing value chain and (especially important) the professional curriculum evaluation of scholarly professionals, we defend that current practices need to be revised. This paper describes a reference architecture that aims to provide openness and reliability to the citation-tracking lifecycle. The solution relies on the use of digitally signed semantic metadata in the different stages of the scholarly publishing workflow in such a manner that authors, publishers, repositories, and citation-analysis systems will have access to independent reliable evidences that are resistant to forgery, impersonation, and repudiation. As far as we know, this is the first paper to combine Semantic Web technologies and public-key cryptography to achieve reliable citation analysis in scholarly publishinghttps://ejournals.bc.edu/ojs/index.php/ital/article/view/3042
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ruben Tous
Manel Guerrero
Jaime Delgado
spellingShingle Ruben Tous
Manel Guerrero
Jaime Delgado
Semantic Web for Reliable Citation Analysis in Scholarly Publishing
Information Technology and Libraries
author_facet Ruben Tous
Manel Guerrero
Jaime Delgado
author_sort Ruben Tous
title Semantic Web for Reliable Citation Analysis in Scholarly Publishing
title_short Semantic Web for Reliable Citation Analysis in Scholarly Publishing
title_full Semantic Web for Reliable Citation Analysis in Scholarly Publishing
title_fullStr Semantic Web for Reliable Citation Analysis in Scholarly Publishing
title_full_unstemmed Semantic Web for Reliable Citation Analysis in Scholarly Publishing
title_sort semantic web for reliable citation analysis in scholarly publishing
publisher American Library Association
series Information Technology and Libraries
issn 0730-9295
2163-5226
publishDate 2011-03-01
description Analysis of the impact of scholarly artifacts is constrained by current unreliable practices in cross-referencing, citation discovering, and citation indexing and analysis, which have not kept pace with the technological advances that are occurring in several areas like knowledge management and security. Because citation analysis has become the primary component in scholarly impact factor calculation, and considering the relevance of this metric within both the scholarly publishing value chain and (especially important) the professional curriculum evaluation of scholarly professionals, we defend that current practices need to be revised. This paper describes a reference architecture that aims to provide openness and reliability to the citation-tracking lifecycle. The solution relies on the use of digitally signed semantic metadata in the different stages of the scholarly publishing workflow in such a manner that authors, publishers, repositories, and citation-analysis systems will have access to independent reliable evidences that are resistant to forgery, impersonation, and repudiation. As far as we know, this is the first paper to combine Semantic Web technologies and public-key cryptography to achieve reliable citation analysis in scholarly publishing
url https://ejournals.bc.edu/ojs/index.php/ital/article/view/3042
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