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Yves Gingras

Researcher at Université du Québec à Montréal

Publications -  276
Citations -  10046

Yves Gingras is an academic researcher from Université du Québec à Montréal. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bibliometrics & Citation. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 254 publications receiving 8801 citations. Previous affiliations of Yves Gingras include Institut national de la recherche agronomique & Université du Québec.

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Bibliometrics: Global gender disparities in science

TL;DR: Sugimoto et al. as mentioned in this paper presented a bibliometric analysis confirming that gender imbalances persist in research output worldwide, and they concluded that gender imbalance persists in all fields.
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Self-Selected or Mandated, Open Access Increases Citation Impact for Higher Quality Research

TL;DR: The OA advantage is greater for the more citable articles, not because of a quality bias from authors self-selecting what to make OA, but because ofA quality advantage, from users self- selecting what to use and cite, freed by OA from the constraints of selective accessibility to subscribers only.
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The Access/Impact Problem and the Green and Gold Roads to Open Access☆

TL;DR: To reach 100% OA, self-archiving needs to be mandated by researchers' employers and funders, as the UK and US have recently recommended, and universities need to implement that mandate.
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The place of universities in the system of knowledge production

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that though we observe a diversification of the sites of knowledge production, universities remain at the center of the system, while the growth of the other sectors (hospitals, industries and governments laboratories) is strongly linked to universities.
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Comparing Bibliometric Statistics Obtained from the Web of Science and Scopus

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare results obtained from the Web of Science and Scopus, and show that the correlations between the measures obtained with both databases for the number of papers and the citations received by countries, as well as for their ranks, are extremely high (R2 >.99).