Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
1. Chalmers, A. F. [1978]. Theories as Structures: 2. Kuhn's Paradigms. What Is This Thing Called
Science? Milton Keynes, England: The Open University Press., Chapter 8.
2. Cole, J. R. (2000). A Short History of the Use of Citations as a Measure of the Impact of Scientific
and Scholarly Work. In The Web of Knowledge: A Festschrift in Honor of Eugene Garfield. B.
Cronin and H. B. Atkins. Medford, NJ, 2000., Information Today, Inc.
4. Cozzens, S. E. (1989). "What do Citations Count? The Rhetoric First model." Scientometrics 15:
437-447.
5. Cozzens, S.E. (1989). "Literature Based Data in Research Evaluation: A Manager's Guide
to Bibliometrics."
6. Davis, C.H. (1990). On Qualitative Research. Library and Information Science Research. 12, 327-
328.
7. Enger, K.B., Quirk, G & Stewart, J. (1989). Statistical Methods Used by Authors of Library and
Information Science Journal Articles. Library and Information Science Research. 11, 37-46.
8. Grover, Robert and Greer, Roger C. [1991], 'The Cross-Disciplinary Imperative of LIS
Research', Library and Information Science Research, 101-113.
9. Katz, J. S. and D. Hicks (1997). Bibliometric Indicators for National Systems of Innovation.
MacRoberts, M.H. & B.R. MacRoberts (1989). Problems of Citation Analysis: A Critical Review.
Journal of the American Society for Information Science 40(5), 342-349.
11. Wainer, H. (1984). "How to Display Data Badly." American Statistician, 38, 2. 137-147.
12. White, H (1992). The Freedom to Write a Research Paper Without being Mugged. Library
Journal. 117, 3. Feb 15. 138-139..
13. Zuckerman, H. (1987). "Citation analysis and the complex problem of intellectual influence."
Scientometrics 12(329-338).