Monday, 9 January 2017

Increasing the visibility of your research - What is bibliometrics - Leeds University Library

 Source: https://library.leeds.ac.uk/researcher-citations

Increasing the visibility of your research

Promoting your research and making it more accessible is becoming
increasingly important. Making your research more visible can increase
the chances of it being used and cited by your peers and the wider
research community. This in turn can help to enhance the impact of your
research and allows you to begin to build your reputation as a
researcher. You can increase the visibility of your research in a number
of ways:





  • Make your research outputs Open Access where possible




































    Open access
    publishing makes peer-reviewed scholarly works available online, free
    for anyone to find and read. This means that the potential readership of
    open access articles is far greater than that for articles where the
    full-text is restricted to subscribers. Funding is available for RCUK and COAF funded research
    to pay for Article Processing Charges associated with Gold open access.
    Gold open access can result in research being made open access
    immediately for other researchers to read and cited.

  • Share your research data






  • Sharing your research data and making it more accessible and visible can result in wider citation of your data and research. Wider citation can create greater impact and increases your recognition and credit.
  • Sign up for an ORCID iD






















































    Using a unique author identifier system such as ORCID
    means that your research outputs are accurately linked to your research
    profile, so the bibliometric data about you and your body of work will
    be more accurate. This improves the visibility of the research. The University Publications Policy encourages researchers to register for an ORCID iD.



  • Include University of Leeds in the author affiliation
















































    Using the standardised institutional affiliation
    "University of Leeds" in all research outputs ensures they are clearly
    affiliated with the University of Leeds and as a result, improves the
    visibility of the research. It is also a University Publications Policy requirement.
































































  • Promote your research online


    Use social media such as Twitter, Facebook and blogging to
    promote your research. They are powerful tools for helping to reach your
    potential audience. Use social networking sites such as LinkedIn,
    Academia.edu and Research Gate to promote your research and connect with
    other researchers. SDDU run a variety of workshops on becoming more visible and using social media.
































































  • Present your research at conferences
    Speak and present your research at key conferences within your
    discipline. Conferences can create opportunities for collaboration and
    networking with other researchers in your field.





  • Track when your research is being used and shared using bibliometrics and altmetrics



    Bibliometrics is the quantitative analysis of research
    literature, based upon citations, and can be used to evaluate the impact
    of a research paper or an individual researcher. Altmetrics are based
    on the number of times an article is shared, downloaded or mentioned on
    social media, blogs or newspapers. More information on bibliometrics and
    altmetrics can be found on our website.



  • Consider carefully which journal to publish in
    It is recognised that the choice of the place of publication is
    an academic matter but there are a number of issues to consider in
    relation to visibility when choosing where to publish (checklist adapted
    from ThinkCheckSubmit.org under a Creative Commons Attribution License)


    • Does the journal have suitable open access options and appropriate embargo periods? 
    • Does the journal comply with your funder requirements around open access?
    • Do you and your colleagues know about the journal? 
    • Is it easy to discover the latest paper in the journal?
    • Have you read any articles from the journal before?
    • Are articles indexed in the services you use?
    • Do you recognise the editorial board?
  • ImpactStory have created a guide to raising your research profile.  Download the ImpactStory guide (PDF).


Increasing the visibility of your research - What is bibliometrics - Leeds University Library

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