The NOAA Library has created a Publications Group a place for everyone across NOAA to share questions, concerns, best practices, and new tools for creating, editing, submitting, and sharing publications. This group is intended to be collaborative, with agenda items, presentations, and discussion topics coming from group members. All NOAA employees (federal or contract) are welcome to join. Meetings are on the second Wednesday, bi-monthly. For a more information or to join the group please email Jennifer Fagan-Fry. |
The NOAA Library research team provides NOAA programs with expert research support. Our services save you time and add value to your project by conducting thorough literature searches to support your work, whether it be for scientific research or making policy decisions. Our services and products are fully customizable and tailored to your needs.
Please see our Research Services Guide or contact the NOAA Library Research Team at library.reference@noaa.gov.
A digital object identifier, or DOI, is a persistent, unique alphanumeric identifier that provides a persistent link to an object (most commonly a document, article, or dataset). The Library assigns DOIs to all NOAA Technical Memorandum that are submitted to the NOAA IR and will mint a DOI for other eligible NOAA publications, produced after 2015, including: NOAA Professional Papers, NOAA Atlases, NOAA Technical Reports
If you would like to request a DOI for your publication you can do so using our DOI Request Form.
Citation analysis helps assess the value and reach of published research through bibliometrics. Some of the main uses of bibliometric analyses include:
Our bibliometrics team utilizes tools such as h-index, citation counts, percentile rankings to help you determine the impact of your work or that of your office/program. Some author analysis tools available to researchers include:
Please visit our bibliometrics guide for more information or contact Sarah Davis (sarah.davis@noaa.gov) for assistance with any of these tools.
Authors can promote and connect their works through the use of an author identifier. Works can be journal articles, technical memorandum or reports, presentations, posters, etc. Here are identifiers that you may want to claim and keep up to date.
Bibliometrics are the quantitative analysis of academic publications. Using academic publications as a data source, bibliometric analysis attempts to provide a better understanding of how research is produced, organized, and interrelated. It also attempts to evaluate academic publications and sets of publications based on the number of citations these publications have received. Bibliometrics and citation analysis is one way the NOAA Central Library is able to illustrate NOAA's status as producer of world-class research.
Bibliometrics can help illustrate the impact of a scholarly publication or group of publications in the greater research community and can support application for grants and research funding.
When used with other methods such as peer review, bibliometrics is a useful tool in evaluating the research output of programs and researchers.
Bibliometrics can be used to identify research strengths and gaps in research and inform decisions about future research.
For more information on different types of research impact measurements, please visit our Bibliometrics Guide.
In addition to the services and resources provided by the NOAA Central Library, there are a variety of other resources on a variety of topics related to scholarly writing and communciations.
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