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Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of African science: a bibliometric analysis

Hugo Confraria, +1 more
- 01 Feb 2015 - 
- Vol. 102, Iss: 2, pp 1241-1268
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TLDR
The apparent productivity of African science, as measured by publications to gross domestic product, has risen in recent years to a level above the world average, although, when one looks at the equivalent ratio after it has been normalized by population, there is still a huge gap to overcome.
Abstract
The number of scientific papers published by researchers in Africa has been rising faster than the total world scientific output in recent years. This trend is relevant, as for a long period up until 1996, Africa's share of the world scientific output remained below 1.5 %. The propensity to publish in the continent has risen particularly fast since 2004, suggesting that a possible take-off of African science is taking place. This paper highlights that, in parallel with this most recent growth in output, the apparent productivity of African science, as measured by publications to gross domestic product, has risen in recent years to a level above the world average, although, when one looks at the equivalent ratio after it has been normalized by population, there is still a huge gap to overcome. Further it is shown that publications from those few African countries whose scientific communities demonstrate higher levels of specialization and integration in international networks, have a higher impact than the world average. Additionally, the paper discusses the potential applications of the new knowledge that has been produced by African researchers, highlighting that so far, South Africa seems to be the only African country where a reasonable part of that new knowledge seems to be connecting with innovation.

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国际刊物《Scientometrics》文献计量研究

魏屹东
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a method to improve the quality of the data collected by the data collection system. But it is difficult to implement and time consuming and computationally expensive.
Journal ArticleDOI

Academic research in innovation: a country analysis

TL;DR: The aim of the study is to identify the most relevant countries in this field and the leading trends that are occurring during the last years and to give a global overview of the current academic state of the art in the area.
Journal ArticleDOI

Determinants of citation impact: A comparative analysis of the Global South versus the Global North

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors apply bibliometric and econometric analysis to study how citation impact varies across countries and find that specialization in particular scientific fields seems significantly more important in the Global South than in the global North.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dominance and leadership in research activities: Collaboration between countries of differing human development is reflected through authorship order and designation as corresponding authors in scientific publications.

TL;DR: The order of signatures and the address for correspondence in scientific publications are bibliographic characteristics that facilitate a precise, in-depth analysis of cooperative practices and their associations with concepts like dominance or leadership.
Journal ArticleDOI

Low income countries have the highest percentages of open access publication: A systematic computational analysis of the biomedical literature

Jonathan Iyandemye, +1 more
- 29 Jul 2019 - 
TL;DR: The finding that open access publication rates are highest in sub-Saharan Africa and low income countries suggests that factors other than open access policy strongly influence authors’ decisions to make their work openly accessible.
References
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国际刊物《Scientometrics》文献计量研究

魏屹东
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a method to improve the quality of the data collected by the data collection system. But it is difficult to implement and time consuming and computationally expensive.
Related Papers (5)
Trending Questions (2)
What are the reason for Africa to write world-class paper?

African countries are increasing scientific output, with specialized networks and rising productivity. English language advantage and collaborations with UK and US researchers contribute to world-class paper production.

Why Africa should write world-class paper?

Africa should write world-class papers to increase scientific impact, connect with innovation, and bridge the gap in productivity normalized by population, as shown in recent bibliometric analysis.