Research LettersGeography of biomedical publications in the European Union, 1990-98
References (5)
- et al.
Geographical analysis of medical publications in 1990
Lancet
(1993) Geography of medical publication
Lancet
(1993)
Cited by (69)
The state of the art on European well-being research within the area of mental health
2015, International Journal of Clinical and Health PsychologyCitation Excerpt :Previous geographical analyses in other areas of research have found similar distributions. An analysis of the biomedical publications in Europe in the 1990s also showed that the Nordic countries and the Netherlands were the most productive countries in the European Union when the publications were normalised to population size and GDP (Hefler, Tempfer, & Kainz, 1999). Furthermore, a bibliometric analysis of public health research in Europe from 1995 to 2004 also found more publications per capita in the north and west of Europe (Clarke et al., 2007).
Geographical distribution of cortex publications
2010, CortexInfectious diseases research
2008, Enfermedades Infecciosas y Microbiologia ClinicaA Bibliometric Evaluation of Publications in Urological Journals among European Union Countries between 2000-2005
2007, European UrologyCitation Excerpt :Small countries (Austria, Denmark, Finland, Netherlands, Sweden) had a higher normalized publication output than larger ones, such as United Kingdom or Germany. These data are consistent with figures ascertained in other disciplines such as clinical chemistry, rheumatology, respiratory and infectious diseases between 1995–2003, but also with regard to the total biomedical publications in the EU during 1990–1998 [9–11,29]. A concentrated allocation of funds to specific research areas and a better utilisation of resources in these countries might be the reason for this effect.
Have the European Union programmes made a difference to biomedical research outputs?
2021, 18th International Conference on Scientometrics and Informetrics, ISSI 2021