Abstract
Social media have transformed the way modern science is communicated. Although several studies have been focused on the use of social media for the dissemination of scientific knowledge and the measurement of the impact of academic output, we know very little about how academics cite social media in their publications. In order to address this gap, a content analysis was performed on a sample of 629 journal articles in medical informatics. The findings showed the presence of 109 citations to social media resources, the majority of which were blogs and wikis. Social media citations were used more frequently to support the literature review section of articles. However, a fair amount of citations was used in order to document various aspects of the methodology section, such as the data collection and analysis process. The paper concludes with the implications of these findings for metadata design for bibliographic databases (like PubMed and Medline).
Access this chapter
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
Preview
Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.
References
Procter, R., Williams, R., Stewart, J., Poschen, M., Snee, H., Voss, A., Asgari-Targhi, M.: Adoption and use of web 2.0 in scholarly communications. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 368, 4039–4056 (2010)
Priem, J., Piwowar, H.A., Hemminger, B.M.: Altmetrics in the wild: Using social media to explore scholarly impact (2012), http://arxiv.org/html/1203.4745v1 (last accessed March 7, 2013)
Priem, J., Costello, K.L.: How and why scholars cite on Twitter. In: Proceedings of the 73rd ASIST Annual Meeting, vol. 47, pp. 1–4 (2010)
Eysenbach, G.: Can Tweets Predict Citations? Metrics of Social Impact Based on Twitter and Correlation with Traditional Metrics of Scientific Impact. Journal of Medical Internet Research 13(4) (2011), http://www.jmir.org/2011/4/e123/ (last accessed March 7, 2013)
Shema, H., Bar-Ilan, J.: Characteristics of Researchblogging.org science Blogs and Bloggers. Altmetrics 11 (2011)
Peters, I., Beutelspacher, L., Maghferat, P., Terliesner, J.: Scientific Bloggers under the Altmetric Microscope. In: Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Information Science and Technology (2012)
Groth, P., Gurney, T.: Studying Scientific Discourse on the Web using Bibliometrics: A Chemistry Blogging Case Study (2010), http://journal.webscience.org/308/2/websci10_submission_48.pdf (last accessed March 11, 2013)
Weller, K., Dröge, E., Puschmann, C.: Citation Analysis in Twitter. In: Approaches for Defining and Measuring Information Flows within Tweets during Scientific Conferences. Science, pp. 1–12 (2011), http://files.ynada.com/papers/msm2011.pdf (last accessed March 11, 2013)
Letierce, J., Passant, A., Breslin, J., Decker, S.: Understanding how Twitter is used to widely spread Scientific Messages. In: Proceedings of the WebSci 2010 Extending the Frontiers of Society OnLine (2010), http://journal.webscience.org/314/2/websci10_submission_79.pdf (last accessed March 11, 2013)
Kusha, K., Thelwall, M., Abdoli, M.: The role of online videos in research communication: A content analysis of Youtube videos cited in academic publications. JASIST 63(9), 1710–1721 (2012)
Syed – Abdul, S., Fernandez-Luque, L., Jian, W.-S., Li, Y.-C., Crain, S., Hsu, M.-H., Wang, Y.-C., Khandregzen, D., Chuluunbaatar, E., Nguyen, P.A., Liou, D.-M.: Misleading health related information promoted through video-based social media: Anorexia on Youtube. Journal of Medical Internet Research 15(2) (2013), http://www.jmir.org/2013/2/e30/
Chou, W.-Y., Hunt, Y., Folkers, A., Augustson, E.: Tweetations for cancer survivorship in the Age of Youtube and Social Media: A narrative analysis. JMIRÂ 13(1) (2011), http://www.jmir.org/2011/1/e7/
Pedrana, A., Hellard, M., Gold, J., Ata, N., Chang, S., Howard, S., Asselin, J., Ilic, O., Batrounen, C., Stoone, M.: Queer as F**k: Reaching and engaging gay men in sexual health promotion through social networking sites. JMIRÂ 15(2) (2013), http://www.jmir.org/2013/2/e25/
Mackert, M., Kim, E., Guadagno, M., Donovan-Kichen, E.: Using twitter for prenatal health promotion: Encouraging a multivitamin habit among college-aged females. In: Global Telehealth, pp. 93–103. IOS Press (2012)
Gotsis, M., Wang, H., Spruijt-Metz, D., Jordan-Marsk, M., Valente, T.: Wellness partners: Design and evaluation of a web-based physical activity diary with social gaming features for Adults. JMIRÂ 2(1) (2013), http://www.researchprotocols.org/2013/1/e10/
McKendrick, D., Cumming, G.P., Lee, A.: Tweetations for increased use of twitter at a medical conference: A report and a review of the educational opportunities. JMIRÂ 14(6) (2012), http://www.jmir.org/2012/6/e176/
Balatsoukas, P., Garoufallou, E., Morris, A., O’Brien, A., Asderi, S., Siatri, R.: Learners’ perceptions on the importance of learning object metadata for relevance judgment. International Journal of Metadata, Semantics and Ontologies 7(4), 283–294 (2012)
Krippendorff, K.: Content Analysis: An introduction to its methodology. SAGE, London (2004)
Buttcher, S., Clarke, C., Cormack, G.: Information Retrieval: Implementing and evaluating search engines. MIT Press (2010)
Niu, X.: National study of information seeking behavior of academic researchers in the United States. JASIST 61(5), 869–890 (2010)
Dublin Core Metadata Initiative. Dublin Core Metadata Element Set, Version 1.1 (2012), http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/ (accessed April 23, 2013)
Dublin Core Metadata Initiative. User Guide (2011), http://wiki.dublincore.org/index.php/User_Guide (accessed April 23, 2013)
Tombros, A., Ruthven, I., Jose, J.: How users assess web-pages for information seeking. JASIST 56(4), 327–344 (2005)
Balatsoukas, P., Ruthven, I.: An eye-tracking approach to the analysis of relevance judgements on the web. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 63(9), 1728–1746 (2012)
Balatsoukas, P., Morris, A., O’Brien, A.: An evaluation framework of user interaction with metadata surrogates. Journal of Information Science 35(3), 321–339 (2009)
Small, H., Kasianovitz, K., Blanford, R., Celaya, I.: What your Tweets tell us about you: Identity, ownership and privacy of Twitter data. The International Journal of Digital Curation 7(1), 174–197 (2012)
Russ, A., Kaisser, M.: Exploratory search on social media. In: Serdyukov, P., Braslavski, P., Kuznetsov, S.O., Kamps, J., Rüger, S., Agichtein, E., Segalovich, I., Yilmaz, E. (eds.) ECIR 2013. LNCS, vol. 7814, pp. 845–848. Springer, Heidelberg (2013)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2013 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this paper
Cite this paper
Rousidis, D., Garoufallou, E., Balatsoukas, P., Paraskeuopoulos, K., Asderi, S., Koutsomiha, D. (2013). Metadata Requirements for Repositories in Health Informatics Research: Evidence from the Analysis of Social Media Citations. In: Garoufallou, E., Greenberg, J. (eds) Metadata and Semantics Research. MTSR 2013. Communications in Computer and Information Science, vol 390. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-03437-9_25
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-03437-9_25
Publisher Name: Springer, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-319-03436-2
Online ISBN: 978-3-319-03437-9
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)