Print

Print


Primary Research Group Inc. has published International Benchmarks for Academic Library Use of Bibliometrics and Altmetrics, 2016-17, ISBN 978-157440-400-5

This study presents data from 20 predominantly research universities in the USA, continental Europe, the UK, Canada and Australia/New Zealand.  Among the survey participants are: Carnegie Mellon, Cambridge University, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya the University at Albany, the University of Melbourne, Florida State University, the University of Alberta and Victoria University of Wellington.  

The report gives detailed data on the use of various bibliometric and altmetric tools such as Google Scholar, Web of Science, Scimago, PlumAnalytics, and many, many others.  The 114-page report presents detailed information on staffing, budgets, marketing, end use, technology and other factors in bibliometric and altmetric service development. 

Just a few of the report’s many findings are that:  

Institutions cited by survey participants for excellence in bibliometrics or altmetrics were: Georgia State University, Yale University, the University of New South Wales, the National Library of Medicine and the University of Pittsburgh, among others. 

50% of the institutions sampled help their researchers to obtain a Thomsen/Reuters Researcher ID. 

A 60 percent majority said demand for bibliometric services increased slightly, 10 percent said it increased considerably, and 5 percent said demand fell somewhat. A quarter of the participants said demand for bibliometric services at their institution had remained about the same over the past two years.  

Academic department heads accounted for a mean of 24.38% of the demand for bibliometric services from the libraries sampled.

Just 5% of those surveyed use Facebook Insights in their altmetrics efforts.

For a table of contents, excerpt, the questionnaire and list of participants, view the product page for this report at: 

http://www.primaryresearch.com/view_product.php?report_id=605

Or visit our general website at www.PrimaryResearch.com.  Primary Research Group studies are also available from most major book distributors and many research report and eBook  aggregators.