1 00:00:06,110 --> 00:00:08,864 More as a recording. 2 00:00:08,864 --> 00:00:10,440 Doesn't say it's recording for you. 3 00:00:10,440 --> 00:00:11,054 Okay? 4 00:00:11,054 --> 00:00:12,640 Okay. Good. 5 00:00:14,090 --> 00:00:16,725 Hi everyone. 6 00:00:16,725 --> 00:00:18,150 Welcome. 7 00:00:18,150 --> 00:00:20,040 We're just gonna wait a few minutes 8 00:00:20,040 --> 00:00:23,020 to let folks join in. 9 00:00:23,210 --> 00:00:26,440 Thank you for coming. 10 00:01:00,160 --> 00:01:03,934 We'll just give it another minute. 11 00:01:03,934 --> 00:01:05,840 We'll have some folks coming in 12 00:01:05,840 --> 00:01:08,099 from the waiting room. 13 00:01:46,900 --> 00:01:49,040 All right. 14 00:01:49,040 --> 00:01:51,140 Let's go ahead and get started here. 15 00:01:51,140 --> 00:01:53,570 We want to make sure we stay on time. 16 00:01:53,570 --> 00:01:55,565 Hi, everyone. 17 00:01:55,565 --> 00:01:57,679 My name is Kaitlyn Madden. 18 00:01:57,679 --> 00:02:01,054 I am a graduate assistant 19 00:02:01,054 --> 00:02:03,110 at the US Office of 20 00:02:03,110 --> 00:02:05,299 Research and Cutler Institute. 21 00:02:05,299 --> 00:02:08,660 And it is my pleasure and privilege today to 22 00:02:08,660 --> 00:02:12,814 be your Zoom moderator and MC. 23 00:02:12,814 --> 00:02:15,350 We have a few technical notes 24 00:02:15,350 --> 00:02:17,329 before we get started. 25 00:02:17,329 --> 00:02:23,850 Whoops. Sorry. 26 00:02:26,740 --> 00:02:28,400 Okay, there we go. 27 00:02:28,400 --> 00:02:30,784 A few technical notes. Before we get started. 28 00:02:30,784 --> 00:02:33,079 We are going to be 29 00:02:33,079 --> 00:02:35,390 recording this event today for 30 00:02:35,390 --> 00:02:38,210 the US Office of Research Archive 31 00:02:38,210 --> 00:02:39,380 and also to be 32 00:02:39,380 --> 00:02:41,375 made available to anyone who was 33 00:02:41,375 --> 00:02:44,014 unable to attend the event today. 34 00:02:44,014 --> 00:02:46,190 If you do not wish to have 35 00:02:46,190 --> 00:02:48,485 your video as a part of the recording, 36 00:02:48,485 --> 00:02:51,530 please go ahead and click 37 00:02:51,530 --> 00:02:54,844 Stop video at the bottom of your Zoom screen. 38 00:02:54,844 --> 00:02:57,709 Now, we are also 39 00:02:57,709 --> 00:03:00,349 going to be offering closed captioning today. 40 00:03:00,349 --> 00:03:02,479 So if you'd like to utilize that, 41 00:03:02,479 --> 00:03:04,220 you can turn that on by 42 00:03:04,220 --> 00:03:07,379 clicking the direct link in the chat. 43 00:03:07,690 --> 00:03:10,445 For the duration of this event, 44 00:03:10,445 --> 00:03:13,609 all participants are going to be muted. 45 00:03:13,609 --> 00:03:15,950 So if you were 46 00:03:15,950 --> 00:03:17,855 going to open them chat momentarily, 47 00:03:17,855 --> 00:03:19,639 if you have any questions 48 00:03:19,639 --> 00:03:21,544 while the presentation's going on, 49 00:03:21,544 --> 00:03:24,229 you can submit those directly into the chat. 50 00:03:24,229 --> 00:03:25,700 And we will answer 51 00:03:25,700 --> 00:03:26,629 your questions 52 00:03:26,629 --> 00:03:28,520 periodically throughout the event. 53 00:03:28,520 --> 00:03:30,350 And then we'll also have some time 54 00:03:30,350 --> 00:03:32,749 at the end for questions and answers. 55 00:03:32,749 --> 00:03:33,679 Today. 56 00:03:33,679 --> 00:03:35,450 Tracy meagre of 57 00:03:35,450 --> 00:03:38,810 the Office of Research and Cutler Institute 58 00:03:38,810 --> 00:03:41,254 will be helping me out behind the scenes. 59 00:03:41,254 --> 00:03:43,625 So if you have any technical questions, 60 00:03:43,625 --> 00:03:45,349 please send them directly 61 00:03:45,349 --> 00:03:47,730 to either of us in the chat. 62 00:03:48,340 --> 00:03:51,919 Thanks, Caitlin. Hi everyone. 63 00:03:51,919 --> 00:03:53,599 I'm Sara Lee Casey, 64 00:03:53,599 --> 00:03:56,300 the coordinator of research instruction 65 00:03:56,300 --> 00:03:59,614 and Liaison Services at the US and libraries. 66 00:03:59,614 --> 00:04:01,970 And welcome to the third event of 67 00:04:01,970 --> 00:04:06,095 our 2021 research and scholarship symposium. 68 00:04:06,095 --> 00:04:07,850 Today's event is 69 00:04:07,850 --> 00:04:09,349 your publishing identity 70 00:04:09,349 --> 00:04:10,939 presented by Morisot, 71 00:04:10,939 --> 00:04:12,409 rural regional 72 00:04:12,409 --> 00:04:14,885 Solution Consultant at Clare of it. 73 00:04:14,885 --> 00:04:17,359 This event is brought to us by 74 00:04:17,359 --> 00:04:19,834 the US Office of Research, 75 00:04:19,834 --> 00:04:21,815 USAA and libraries and 76 00:04:21,815 --> 00:04:24,559 the Center for collaboration and development. 77 00:04:24,559 --> 00:04:26,900 Today's event is part of 78 00:04:26,900 --> 00:04:28,235 a newly re-imagined 79 00:04:28,235 --> 00:04:30,740 online research symposium series 80 00:04:30,740 --> 00:04:33,229 intended to bring together faculty, 81 00:04:33,229 --> 00:04:35,389 staff and students to 82 00:04:35,389 --> 00:04:37,430 celebrate all the wonderful research, 83 00:04:37,430 --> 00:04:39,620 scholarship and creative activity 84 00:04:39,620 --> 00:04:41,794 happening across us m. 85 00:04:41,794 --> 00:04:44,239 This virtual series will take place 86 00:04:44,239 --> 00:04:45,950 every Friday from noon to 87 00:04:45,950 --> 00:04:48,274 one until early April. 88 00:04:48,274 --> 00:04:50,120 The series will be a mix 89 00:04:50,120 --> 00:04:52,280 of skills-based workshops, 90 00:04:52,280 --> 00:04:54,604 lightning talk mini presentations 91 00:04:54,604 --> 00:04:56,690 covering a wide range of topics, 92 00:04:56,690 --> 00:04:59,329 research fields and experiences. 93 00:04:59,329 --> 00:05:02,540 And a keynote address from Dr. Langford of 94 00:05:02,540 --> 00:05:05,735 NYU on best practices for diversity, 95 00:05:05,735 --> 00:05:08,135 equity and inclusion and research. 96 00:05:08,135 --> 00:05:09,200 Registration. 97 00:05:09,200 --> 00:05:10,369 E-mails will be going out 98 00:05:10,369 --> 00:05:12,649 weekly and we hope you will join us. 99 00:05:12,649 --> 00:05:14,180 I would like to thank the 100 00:05:14,180 --> 00:05:16,085 US Office of Research, 101 00:05:16,085 --> 00:05:18,050 us some libraries and 102 00:05:18,050 --> 00:05:20,225 the Center for collaboration and development, 103 00:05:20,225 --> 00:05:22,640 Marissa glow and our planning committee 104 00:05:22,640 --> 00:05:24,424 for making today's event possible. 105 00:05:24,424 --> 00:05:25,609 And I would also like to 106 00:05:25,609 --> 00:05:27,439 thank all of you for joining us. 107 00:05:27,439 --> 00:05:29,405 Now it's my pleasure to introduce 108 00:05:29,405 --> 00:05:30,620 our workshop presenter for 109 00:05:30,620 --> 00:05:32,749 today's event, Mercer Bruegel. 110 00:05:32,749 --> 00:05:33,800 0 is a regional 111 00:05:33,800 --> 00:05:36,050 Solution Consultant for Clare of it. 112 00:05:36,050 --> 00:05:38,359 She completed her ML IS 113 00:05:38,359 --> 00:05:41,240 at McGill University in 2015. 114 00:05:41,240 --> 00:05:42,889 After some previous Graduate 115 00:05:42,889 --> 00:05:44,510 Studies in the humanities. 116 00:05:44,510 --> 00:05:46,220 She has Blend bandwidth Clare 117 00:05:46,220 --> 00:05:48,410 of it since 2016, 118 00:05:48,410 --> 00:05:49,940 serving Canada and it's 119 00:05:49,940 --> 00:05:51,770 two official languages and 120 00:05:51,770 --> 00:05:53,435 is based in Montreal. 121 00:05:53,435 --> 00:05:56,239 She really enjoys helping users Excel and 122 00:05:56,239 --> 00:05:57,469 maximize how Web of 123 00:05:57,469 --> 00:05:59,389 Science can help researchers, 124 00:05:59,389 --> 00:06:01,954 librarians, and research evaluators 125 00:06:01,954 --> 00:06:04,505 without further ado. Here is Marisa. 126 00:06:04,505 --> 00:06:06,420 We hope you enjoy. 127 00:06:06,640 --> 00:06:09,679 Hello everyone and thank you for 128 00:06:09,679 --> 00:06:13,025 all for your attendance today. 129 00:06:13,025 --> 00:06:15,590 And I'll be taking questions throughout 130 00:06:15,590 --> 00:06:18,890 the session and afterwards. 131 00:06:18,890 --> 00:06:21,769 And also my email will be on the slides that 132 00:06:21,769 --> 00:06:23,239 I've shared with Zara that 133 00:06:23,239 --> 00:06:25,115 will be distributed as well. 134 00:06:25,115 --> 00:06:27,425 So without further ado, 135 00:06:27,425 --> 00:06:32,490 I will show you and share my screen. 136 00:06:37,740 --> 00:06:42,080 Okay, can everybody see my screen? 137 00:06:58,020 --> 00:07:01,180 Okay, so here you have my contact. 138 00:07:01,180 --> 00:07:03,520 So today we're going to talk about 139 00:07:03,520 --> 00:07:06,789 your publishing identity 140 00:07:06,789 --> 00:07:09,200 and train and do this. 141 00:07:29,190 --> 00:07:32,844 Today we're going to discuss how to 142 00:07:32,844 --> 00:07:36,399 have a publishing identity in your field. 143 00:07:36,399 --> 00:07:39,924 But not only also to find 144 00:07:39,924 --> 00:07:45,324 very relevant scholars in your field. 145 00:07:45,324 --> 00:07:47,020 So we're going to talk about the web 146 00:07:47,020 --> 00:07:49,404 of science and how to use it. 147 00:07:49,404 --> 00:07:51,789 And also because the Web of Science, 148 00:07:51,789 --> 00:07:53,169 we're in a big transition 149 00:07:53,169 --> 00:07:55,240 with a new interface. 150 00:07:55,240 --> 00:07:58,269 So we do index very 151 00:07:58,269 --> 00:07:59,844 high-quality content 152 00:07:59,844 --> 00:08:02,170 and only peer review materials. 153 00:08:02,170 --> 00:08:04,570 And we do, we're going to talk today about 154 00:08:04,570 --> 00:08:07,439 the multi-dimensional researcher profiles 155 00:08:07,439 --> 00:08:09,470 and how it is 156 00:08:09,470 --> 00:08:13,310 important to be visible and for your, 157 00:08:13,310 --> 00:08:16,534 your research to properly 158 00:08:16,534 --> 00:08:19,279 be distributed within your fields 159 00:08:19,279 --> 00:08:21,395 and in the right circles. 160 00:08:21,395 --> 00:08:22,820 So today we're going to 161 00:08:22,820 --> 00:08:23,959 concentrate on the Web 162 00:08:23,959 --> 00:08:25,099 of Science Core Collection. 163 00:08:25,099 --> 00:08:28,564 So the big purple center here. 164 00:08:28,564 --> 00:08:32,090 But the whole platform has many databases. 165 00:08:32,090 --> 00:08:35,854 So this all sand for a, a take home. 166 00:08:35,854 --> 00:08:37,550 So here we're going to focus 167 00:08:37,550 --> 00:08:38,990 on the core collection. 168 00:08:38,990 --> 00:08:40,849 And we were a bit of 169 00:08:40,849 --> 00:08:43,339 a victim of our name, Web of Science. 170 00:08:43,339 --> 00:08:45,170 But we are multi, the diamond and 171 00:08:45,170 --> 00:08:49,640 multidisciplinary database with a lot, 172 00:08:49,640 --> 00:08:51,049 not only science but 173 00:08:51,049 --> 00:08:53,524 social sciences, arts, and humanities. 174 00:08:53,524 --> 00:08:55,129 And we also have 175 00:08:55,129 --> 00:08:56,869 this emerging sources Citation 176 00:08:56,869 --> 00:08:58,264 Index where we do 177 00:08:58,264 --> 00:09:02,179 publish much smaller journals that are 178 00:09:02,179 --> 00:09:06,680 more regional focus and may not be, 179 00:09:06,680 --> 00:09:09,560 may not have a journal impact factor, 180 00:09:09,560 --> 00:09:14,659 which is a ranking number for journals. 181 00:09:14,659 --> 00:09:19,160 And our strength is that we were 182 00:09:19,160 --> 00:09:22,010 the first citation index that 183 00:09:22,010 --> 00:09:24,230 was discovery and implemented 184 00:09:24,230 --> 00:09:26,419 by Dr. Garfield in the 60s. 185 00:09:26,419 --> 00:09:32,809 So our added value is that we are publisher, 186 00:09:32,809 --> 00:09:37,385 belong, we are, we are curators and indexers, 187 00:09:37,385 --> 00:09:40,759 but we do not belong to a specific publisher. 188 00:09:40,759 --> 00:09:43,340 So our selection criteria 189 00:09:43,340 --> 00:09:46,490 is quite objective and unbiased. 190 00:09:46,490 --> 00:09:48,620 And we have, since 191 00:09:48,620 --> 00:09:52,114 our separation from Thomson Reuters and 2017, 192 00:09:52,114 --> 00:09:54,259 we have exponentially increased 193 00:09:54,259 --> 00:09:59,465 our open access content, making. Scholarly. 194 00:09:59,465 --> 00:10:04,055 Content much more accessible to all. 195 00:10:04,055 --> 00:10:05,869 So here we want to 196 00:10:05,869 --> 00:10:08,689 really focus on the Web 197 00:10:08,689 --> 00:10:11,315 of Science as a discovery platform. 198 00:10:11,315 --> 00:10:13,219 So to discover not only 199 00:10:13,219 --> 00:10:14,570 the research that is 200 00:10:14,570 --> 00:10:16,789 relevant or in your interest, 201 00:10:16,789 --> 00:10:19,969 but the authors and the researchers 202 00:10:19,969 --> 00:10:24,860 that may be very important collaborator. 203 00:10:24,860 --> 00:10:26,300 And this could, could be 204 00:10:26,300 --> 00:10:28,219 anywhere in the world because we do 205 00:10:28,219 --> 00:10:32,284 index all authors on all papers. 206 00:10:32,284 --> 00:10:35,540 And since 2008, all of these authors 207 00:10:35,540 --> 00:10:36,889 are linked to their 208 00:10:36,889 --> 00:10:38,750 institutional affiliation. 209 00:10:38,750 --> 00:10:40,910 So the name of the institution, 210 00:10:40,910 --> 00:10:42,320 whether it's academic, 211 00:10:42,320 --> 00:10:44,480 government or industry, 212 00:10:44,480 --> 00:10:47,134 and their address or their 213 00:10:47,134 --> 00:10:50,254 corresponding at least email address in, 214 00:10:50,254 --> 00:10:52,789 on it in each paper. 215 00:10:52,789 --> 00:10:55,535 So with over 3 million articles 216 00:10:55,535 --> 00:10:56,749 published annually, 217 00:10:56,749 --> 00:10:58,459 it's quite important that 218 00:10:58,459 --> 00:11:02,270 you are as a researcher, 219 00:11:02,270 --> 00:11:04,460 or if you'd like to bind a researcher, 220 00:11:04,460 --> 00:11:06,935 that they are searchable 221 00:11:06,935 --> 00:11:08,825 and that you can find them. 222 00:11:08,825 --> 00:11:12,635 So the cited references 223 00:11:12,635 --> 00:11:16,235 are for all papers go back to 9800. 224 00:11:16,235 --> 00:11:19,325 All author names and addresses are captured. 225 00:11:19,325 --> 00:11:23,419 The funding data from also and we're going to 226 00:11:23,419 --> 00:11:24,950 address the funding data 227 00:11:24,950 --> 00:11:27,229 on my next visit to Usain, 228 00:11:27,229 --> 00:11:29,629 which will be on the 5th of March. 229 00:11:29,629 --> 00:11:31,909 We do index 230 00:11:31,909 --> 00:11:33,800 the full acknowledgment 231 00:11:33,800 --> 00:11:35,404 paragraph on manuscripts. 232 00:11:35,404 --> 00:11:37,429 So funding agencies and 233 00:11:37,429 --> 00:11:39,005 grant numbers if present, 234 00:11:39,005 --> 00:11:40,835 if the authors diligently 235 00:11:40,835 --> 00:11:42,620 thank their finance. 236 00:11:42,620 --> 00:11:44,600 Their financial sources 237 00:11:44,600 --> 00:11:46,745 are indexed and searchable. 238 00:11:46,745 --> 00:11:48,170 So if you are working on 239 00:11:48,170 --> 00:11:50,735 a specific topic, you can, 240 00:11:50,735 --> 00:11:53,449 you'll also be able to find 241 00:11:53,449 --> 00:11:56,030 the funding agencies that 242 00:11:56,030 --> 00:11:57,784 fund these specific topics, 243 00:11:57,784 --> 00:12:00,469 whether in the US or around the world. 244 00:12:00,469 --> 00:12:02,149 We've also standardized 245 00:12:02,149 --> 00:12:05,570 the author affiliations because we, 246 00:12:05,570 --> 00:12:09,290 we unify institutions such 247 00:12:09,290 --> 00:12:12,079 as Usain as part of the University of Maine 248 00:12:12,079 --> 00:12:13,939 system and whatnot and 249 00:12:13,939 --> 00:12:16,925 any other research institute 250 00:12:16,925 --> 00:12:18,920 affiliated with us, 251 00:12:18,920 --> 00:12:22,595 Sam is under the USA banner. 252 00:12:22,595 --> 00:12:26,269 So also when we do claim to index 253 00:12:26,269 --> 00:12:28,235 a journal or 254 00:12:28,235 --> 00:12:30,440 conference proceedings or a book, 255 00:12:30,440 --> 00:12:32,629 we do index from cover to cover. 256 00:12:32,629 --> 00:12:35,480 We index all types of documents. 257 00:12:35,480 --> 00:12:38,300 So not only articles and not only reviews, 258 00:12:38,300 --> 00:12:40,250 but editorials, letters, 259 00:12:40,250 --> 00:12:42,809 corrections, and whatnot. 260 00:12:42,809 --> 00:12:45,100 And we have Web of Science is 261 00:12:45,100 --> 00:12:47,379 updated five times a week. 262 00:12:47,379 --> 00:12:50,109 So this is, this is the strength of the web 263 00:12:50,109 --> 00:12:55,600 of every record so or, or publication. 264 00:12:55,600 --> 00:12:58,090 We do index all of 265 00:12:58,090 --> 00:13:01,089 the items from the references. 266 00:13:01,089 --> 00:13:03,609 So the bibliography you'll have, 267 00:13:03,609 --> 00:13:05,709 you'll have access to 268 00:13:05,709 --> 00:13:08,440 all of the titles of the bibliographies, 269 00:13:08,440 --> 00:13:10,495 all of the citing articles. 270 00:13:10,495 --> 00:13:12,939 So anything that is 271 00:13:12,939 --> 00:13:16,180 citing this publication and 272 00:13:16,180 --> 00:13:19,030 also related records which will also 273 00:13:19,030 --> 00:13:22,614 help discover more collaborators, 274 00:13:22,614 --> 00:13:25,590 even if maybe a specific 275 00:13:25,590 --> 00:13:28,039 Researcher working in the same field 276 00:13:28,039 --> 00:13:29,659 or topic may not have 277 00:13:29,659 --> 00:13:33,904 cited directly this article. 278 00:13:33,904 --> 00:13:35,975 It may be citing 279 00:13:35,975 --> 00:13:39,980 a common article in the reference list. 280 00:13:39,980 --> 00:13:41,630 So we'll take a look at 281 00:13:41,630 --> 00:13:43,520 that and how that works. 282 00:13:43,520 --> 00:13:45,920 So Dr. Eugene Garfield 283 00:13:45,920 --> 00:13:48,125 is the founder of the Web of Science. 284 00:13:48,125 --> 00:13:50,089 Citation Index tends to 285 00:13:50,089 --> 00:13:51,485 bring together material that would 286 00:13:51,485 --> 00:13:52,909 never be collated by 287 00:13:52,909 --> 00:13:54,709 the usual subject indexing. 288 00:13:54,709 --> 00:13:55,909 It is best described as 289 00:13:55,909 --> 00:13:58,699 an association of ideas indexing. 290 00:13:58,699 --> 00:14:02,930 So this is where it really makes, 291 00:14:02,930 --> 00:14:05,540 makes it a discovery platform. 292 00:14:05,540 --> 00:14:11,000 Okay, So I'll leave these For as a take home. 293 00:14:11,000 --> 00:14:13,219 But we will be discussing hawks. 294 00:14:13,219 --> 00:14:16,399 So that's our open, 295 00:14:16,399 --> 00:14:19,400 not the open access content in the web of 296 00:14:19,400 --> 00:14:23,345 science through US MC library subscription, 297 00:14:23,345 --> 00:14:25,534 and also through any, 298 00:14:25,534 --> 00:14:27,769 any open access content 299 00:14:27,769 --> 00:14:29,839 that might be sitting in a repository, 300 00:14:29,839 --> 00:14:33,440 we link to over 4000 repositories worldwide. 301 00:14:33,440 --> 00:14:35,329 And this includes 302 00:14:35,329 --> 00:14:38,674 academic and government repositories. 303 00:14:38,674 --> 00:14:41,060 And we'll take a look on 304 00:14:41,060 --> 00:14:43,295 how to search for an author. 305 00:14:43,295 --> 00:14:45,230 I do want to mention that by 306 00:14:45,230 --> 00:14:46,550 the end of the month actuated 307 00:14:46,550 --> 00:14:48,755 the 25th of February, 308 00:14:48,755 --> 00:14:51,635 we will have another, 309 00:14:51,635 --> 00:14:54,260 a more responsible metric 310 00:14:54,260 --> 00:14:56,690 versus two to the h index, 311 00:14:56,690 --> 00:14:58,745 which will be the beam plot. 312 00:14:58,745 --> 00:15:00,289 So that will come into 313 00:15:00,289 --> 00:15:04,069 the product at the end of the month. 314 00:15:04,069 --> 00:15:05,719 And so you'll see that on 315 00:15:05,719 --> 00:15:07,790 the new Web of Science. 316 00:15:07,790 --> 00:15:11,779 And I can maybe talk about that on, 317 00:15:11,779 --> 00:15:13,444 on my next visit here. 318 00:15:13,444 --> 00:15:16,265 So I will also discuss problems. 319 00:15:16,265 --> 00:15:19,279 Problems is a, an open 320 00:15:19,279 --> 00:15:23,434 source product that is ours, 321 00:15:23,434 --> 00:15:29,075 that actually houses author profiles that, 322 00:15:29,075 --> 00:15:31,250 that have either a web of 323 00:15:31,250 --> 00:15:35,104 science researcher ID or an orchid. 324 00:15:35,104 --> 00:15:37,145 An orchid ID. 325 00:15:37,145 --> 00:15:40,910 So it's important early on, 326 00:15:40,910 --> 00:15:43,160 as early as you can as 327 00:15:43,160 --> 00:15:45,050 a researcher to create one 328 00:15:45,050 --> 00:15:47,720 of these identifier's, sue. 329 00:15:47,720 --> 00:15:50,254 So that, so that you are, 330 00:15:50,254 --> 00:15:53,089 that people can discover you, 331 00:15:53,089 --> 00:15:56,345 you can upload your, 332 00:15:56,345 --> 00:15:59,734 your scholarly activity as it comes. 333 00:15:59,734 --> 00:16:01,519 And I'll show you how Web of Science 334 00:16:01,519 --> 00:16:03,695 has a 2 relationship on 335 00:16:03,695 --> 00:16:06,829 updating your author identifier 336 00:16:06,829 --> 00:16:09,320 to your your publications. 337 00:16:09,320 --> 00:16:11,779 Okay, So without further ado, 338 00:16:11,779 --> 00:16:14,390 I will go into the product. 339 00:16:14,390 --> 00:16:15,920 So and I will show you, 340 00:16:15,920 --> 00:16:20,240 I will discuss the new our metamorphoses 341 00:16:20,240 --> 00:16:22,310 here, our new platform. 342 00:16:22,310 --> 00:16:24,409 So until we do 343 00:16:24,409 --> 00:16:27,619 the official launch of our new interface, 344 00:16:27,619 --> 00:16:30,080 all Web of Science users 345 00:16:30,080 --> 00:16:33,230 will have access to both. 346 00:16:33,230 --> 00:16:35,840 Both interfaces through, 347 00:16:35,840 --> 00:16:37,699 through different tabs. 348 00:16:37,699 --> 00:16:39,860 So I'm going to go to E. 349 00:16:39,860 --> 00:16:42,380 So this is our new interface, 350 00:16:42,380 --> 00:16:44,030 but I want to just explain. 351 00:16:44,030 --> 00:16:45,469 You'll have to come in through 352 00:16:45,469 --> 00:16:47,420 here, through your, 353 00:16:47,420 --> 00:16:50,675 through the library website 354 00:16:50,675 --> 00:16:52,430 and choose Web of Science. 355 00:16:52,430 --> 00:16:54,559 And I do suggest to 356 00:16:54,559 --> 00:16:57,185 create a profile for yourself. 357 00:16:57,185 --> 00:16:59,240 The advantages are that you can 358 00:16:59,240 --> 00:17:03,920 create saved lists of records. 359 00:17:03,920 --> 00:17:05,629 You can also create alerts. 360 00:17:05,629 --> 00:17:08,539 So if you are, for example, 361 00:17:08,539 --> 00:17:11,554 wanting to keep abreast 362 00:17:11,554 --> 00:17:13,639 or doing some information monitoring 363 00:17:13,639 --> 00:17:15,169 on a specific topic. 364 00:17:15,169 --> 00:17:16,804 I'm an offered. 365 00:17:16,804 --> 00:17:18,710 You can do so and I'll show 366 00:17:18,710 --> 00:17:20,884 you how to do that as well. 367 00:17:20,884 --> 00:17:25,279 So the this is the landing page for the, 368 00:17:25,279 --> 00:17:28,040 we'll call it the classic Web of Science. 369 00:17:28,040 --> 00:17:30,889 And this is the core collection. 370 00:17:30,889 --> 00:17:33,995 So these are all the indices 371 00:17:33,995 --> 00:17:39,229 are subjected to your subscription. 372 00:17:39,229 --> 00:17:40,609 So that may vary. 373 00:17:40,609 --> 00:17:42,079 But by clicking the big 374 00:17:42,079 --> 00:17:44,780 purple, purple button here, 375 00:17:44,780 --> 00:17:46,429 virtual button, you will get 376 00:17:46,429 --> 00:17:49,715 to the new interface which is here. 377 00:17:49,715 --> 00:17:52,819 So the new interface defaults 378 00:17:52,819 --> 00:17:55,085 to all fields, field. 379 00:17:55,085 --> 00:17:56,629 So it does default to 380 00:17:56,629 --> 00:18:00,349 the core collection or all databases. 381 00:18:00,349 --> 00:18:02,885 You can choose all databases as well. 382 00:18:02,885 --> 00:18:04,939 But we're going to focus on 383 00:18:04,939 --> 00:18:06,890 the core collection today because that is 384 00:18:06,890 --> 00:18:10,535 where we have the most fields 385 00:18:10,535 --> 00:18:13,099 and show you how 386 00:18:13,099 --> 00:18:15,844 the author search works as well. 387 00:18:15,844 --> 00:18:18,620 So we're going to go on a, 388 00:18:18,620 --> 00:18:20,750 on a simple topic for 389 00:18:20,750 --> 00:18:23,389 now and a topic that is not in the stem. 390 00:18:23,389 --> 00:18:24,650 So just to prove 391 00:18:24,650 --> 00:18:26,360 that we are multidisciplinary. 392 00:18:26,360 --> 00:18:28,039 So I've, 393 00:18:28,039 --> 00:18:30,724 I'm going to stay in the all fields, field, 394 00:18:30,724 --> 00:18:32,810 which really is not 395 00:18:32,810 --> 00:18:35,195 that particular with syntax, 396 00:18:35,195 --> 00:18:38,255 which can be difficult if, 397 00:18:38,255 --> 00:18:40,700 if you're not a librarian or 398 00:18:40,700 --> 00:18:42,950 if you're not working with your librarian, 399 00:18:42,950 --> 00:18:44,989 but I do suggest that you do that 400 00:18:44,989 --> 00:18:47,389 if you are doing some information monitoring, 401 00:18:47,389 --> 00:18:48,754 you'll want to set up an alert. 402 00:18:48,754 --> 00:18:51,110 You want to get specific as possible. 403 00:18:51,110 --> 00:18:55,160 So here I'm going to just launch a search 404 00:18:55,160 --> 00:18:58,040 on historical architecture 405 00:18:58,040 --> 00:18:59,389 or history architecture. 406 00:18:59,389 --> 00:19:02,240 And I can trunk and truncating here with a, 407 00:19:02,240 --> 00:19:05,809 with a star so 408 00:19:05,809 --> 00:19:08,359 that I can get all the variance here, 409 00:19:08,359 --> 00:19:10,384 such as the adjectives are the nouns or 410 00:19:10,384 --> 00:19:14,135 architectural and historical or history. 411 00:19:14,135 --> 00:19:15,709 I've truncated both of 412 00:19:15,709 --> 00:19:18,920 these words and I'm just going to launch. 413 00:19:18,920 --> 00:19:22,925 So the speed of a new web of Science is, 414 00:19:22,925 --> 00:19:26,900 is quite, have been, has improved. 415 00:19:26,900 --> 00:19:28,969 Let's make it a little bigger, 416 00:19:28,969 --> 00:19:30,950 has improved quite a bit. 417 00:19:30,950 --> 00:19:35,989 So here, it actually defaults by irrelevance, 418 00:19:35,989 --> 00:19:38,989 but you can change the order. 419 00:19:38,989 --> 00:19:42,650 So you can do, you can go with date, 420 00:19:42,650 --> 00:19:48,019 so you can do new twist to two older. 421 00:19:48,019 --> 00:19:51,390 And you can of course, 422 00:19:52,210 --> 00:19:56,390 read, read, read, revert to something else. 423 00:19:56,390 --> 00:19:58,295 So citations, for example, 424 00:19:58,295 --> 00:20:00,590 if you wanted to see what is the 425 00:20:00,590 --> 00:20:03,529 highly, highest cited work. 426 00:20:03,529 --> 00:20:05,690 So citations are important, 427 00:20:05,690 --> 00:20:10,939 they do indicate influence in the field. 428 00:20:10,939 --> 00:20:12,680 However, there's a lot of 429 00:20:12,680 --> 00:20:15,080 very good scholarship that never gets cited 430 00:20:15,080 --> 00:20:21,109 because I'm just a B or a lot of the times, 431 00:20:21,109 --> 00:20:23,225 we're unaware of 432 00:20:23,225 --> 00:20:26,000 the influential researchers in the field. 433 00:20:26,000 --> 00:20:29,149 So how we work is that, 434 00:20:29,149 --> 00:20:32,400 and I'll show you a full record here. 435 00:20:32,950 --> 00:20:35,659 Back to here. 436 00:20:35,659 --> 00:20:38,300 So this is a very broad search. 437 00:20:38,300 --> 00:20:39,650 So this is where I 438 00:20:39,650 --> 00:20:41,480 might want to change it here. 439 00:20:41,480 --> 00:20:44,720 So it's I, I, 440 00:20:44,720 --> 00:20:46,804 if I want to add, 441 00:20:46,804 --> 00:20:51,065 I want to change my all fields to the topic. 442 00:20:51,065 --> 00:20:58,384 I can look at history and architecture. 443 00:20:58,384 --> 00:21:03,035 Or I can, I can want them near each other, 444 00:21:03,035 --> 00:21:06,875 separated by five words, for example. 445 00:21:06,875 --> 00:21:10,069 And I can launch my search this way. 446 00:21:10,069 --> 00:21:12,725 So in this case, 447 00:21:12,725 --> 00:21:16,504 if I look at this, 448 00:21:16,504 --> 00:21:18,919 this record here, I have 449 00:21:18,919 --> 00:21:21,319 the, the author here. 450 00:21:21,319 --> 00:21:22,700 So but notice here that 451 00:21:22,700 --> 00:21:24,830 this was published in 2000. 452 00:21:24,830 --> 00:21:28,820 So as of 2008 we have the full first name, 453 00:21:28,820 --> 00:21:30,634 whereas before, 454 00:21:30,634 --> 00:21:34,280 journals did not require the full first name. 455 00:21:34,280 --> 00:21:38,630 However, each author is hyperlinked. 456 00:21:38,630 --> 00:21:40,130 So here and a lot of 457 00:21:40,130 --> 00:21:42,710 the times in social sciences and humanities, 458 00:21:42,710 --> 00:21:45,725 you will have a low count of authors. 459 00:21:45,725 --> 00:21:50,480 A lot of physics papers or chemistry papers. 460 00:21:50,480 --> 00:21:55,579 We have records went up to 5000 offers 461 00:21:55,579 --> 00:21:58,129 him they're all equal in our eyes and 462 00:21:58,129 --> 00:22:00,995 they're all affiliated with an address. 463 00:22:00,995 --> 00:22:03,814 So these are hyperlinked. 464 00:22:03,814 --> 00:22:08,240 And so if I am wanting to look at 465 00:22:08,240 --> 00:22:13,324 the author record of this of this researcher, 466 00:22:13,324 --> 00:22:15,349 I can click on it and it'll 467 00:22:15,349 --> 00:22:17,854 give me the offer record here. 468 00:22:17,854 --> 00:22:20,659 And actually this is an open access. 469 00:22:20,659 --> 00:22:22,490 So the my EndNote click, 470 00:22:22,490 --> 00:22:27,425 which is a free browser for all. 471 00:22:27,425 --> 00:22:30,019 We'll, we'll search for the, 472 00:22:30,019 --> 00:22:33,080 for the, for the full text. 473 00:22:33,080 --> 00:22:37,115 So here is interesting because 474 00:22:37,115 --> 00:22:41,779 I have the variance of the researcher's name 475 00:22:41,779 --> 00:22:46,580 and all of the variants that he's 476 00:22:46,580 --> 00:22:48,710 published in Web of Science and 477 00:22:48,710 --> 00:22:52,160 also owe the previous affiliations. 478 00:22:52,160 --> 00:22:53,120 So if you don't know 479 00:22:53,120 --> 00:22:54,800 the most recent affiliation 480 00:22:54,800 --> 00:22:56,855 and you're doing an author search. 481 00:22:56,855 --> 00:23:00,199 And there are too many results, 482 00:23:00,199 --> 00:23:02,570 which really shouldn't be 483 00:23:02,570 --> 00:23:06,410 the case because since October of 2019, 484 00:23:06,410 --> 00:23:09,710 we've really improved our disambiguation. 485 00:23:09,710 --> 00:23:11,150 With authors. 486 00:23:11,150 --> 00:23:14,029 So in this case, 487 00:23:14,029 --> 00:23:17,540 there was three previous affiliations 488 00:23:17,540 --> 00:23:20,119 or two previous affiliations to this one. 489 00:23:20,119 --> 00:23:22,249 And we have now 490 00:23:22,249 --> 00:23:24,575 also added the author position. 491 00:23:24,575 --> 00:23:29,015 So and this is very common in, 492 00:23:29,015 --> 00:23:31,070 in the social sciences, for example. 493 00:23:31,070 --> 00:23:34,370 So he was first author 93% of the time, 494 00:23:34,370 --> 00:23:36,169 the last author 5%, 495 00:23:36,169 --> 00:23:40,580 and a corresponding author 77% of the time. 496 00:23:40,580 --> 00:23:43,415 So this is interesting here. 497 00:23:43,415 --> 00:23:48,560 So this author has not claimed their record. 498 00:23:48,560 --> 00:23:52,279 But if I can go here and a 499 00:23:52,279 --> 00:23:57,214 search now for one of the authors here, 500 00:23:57,214 --> 00:23:59,465 I can go into my author search 501 00:23:59,465 --> 00:24:03,389 and search for Yvonne beyond. 502 00:24:03,820 --> 00:24:07,160 Hope I'm pronouncing this correctly. 503 00:24:07,160 --> 00:24:11,930 Yvonne has claimed or her author record, 504 00:24:11,930 --> 00:24:15,245 so there's a little green checkmark here, 505 00:24:15,245 --> 00:24:17,734 meaning that she has validated 506 00:24:17,734 --> 00:24:20,719 that it's these publications, 507 00:24:20,719 --> 00:24:22,460 she has 15 publications. 508 00:24:22,460 --> 00:24:24,650 Those are indeed hers. 509 00:24:24,650 --> 00:24:28,220 So what happens is that I can actually view 510 00:24:28,220 --> 00:24:30,679 the public profile On 511 00:24:30,679 --> 00:24:35,015 Pop lines that this creates automatically. 512 00:24:35,015 --> 00:24:38,465 So she has both an author, 513 00:24:38,465 --> 00:24:45,599 a researcher ID and an author, an orchid ID. 514 00:24:56,050 --> 00:25:00,860 Go going on here. 515 00:25:00,860 --> 00:25:02,480 So this is the pub 516 00:25:02,480 --> 00:25:05,795 one's profile for very vine. 517 00:25:05,795 --> 00:25:08,450 So he or she has both publications 518 00:25:08,450 --> 00:25:10,489 and peer review activity. 519 00:25:10,489 --> 00:25:12,575 So put ones was really created 520 00:25:12,575 --> 00:25:15,979 to to give a thankless job of 521 00:25:15,979 --> 00:25:18,875 peer reviewing some value and 522 00:25:18,875 --> 00:25:21,860 can be also in the end, 523 00:25:21,860 --> 00:25:24,785 this is actually used by publishers to find 524 00:25:24,785 --> 00:25:28,579 peer reviewers in their research fields. 525 00:25:28,579 --> 00:25:31,880 So, so there are research field tags here. 526 00:25:31,880 --> 00:25:33,754 All the publications 527 00:25:33,754 --> 00:25:37,955 are automatically populated since 528 00:25:37,955 --> 00:25:41,870 she puts on her her identifier 529 00:25:41,870 --> 00:25:44,390 here on all her publications. 530 00:25:44,390 --> 00:25:47,375 So the good news is that there is 531 00:25:47,375 --> 00:25:48,980 a push pull or 532 00:25:48,980 --> 00:25:51,050 a 2 updating process 533 00:25:51,050 --> 00:25:52,909 that we have with Web of Science. 534 00:25:52,909 --> 00:25:54,619 So when you submit 535 00:25:54,619 --> 00:25:56,675 a manuscript to be published, 536 00:25:56,675 --> 00:26:00,874 and let's say you include so you, you, 537 00:26:00,874 --> 00:26:04,940 you ideally include your author identifier 538 00:26:04,940 --> 00:26:07,669 at the time of the manuscript submission. 539 00:26:07,669 --> 00:26:10,550 But if you don't and update 540 00:26:10,550 --> 00:26:12,920 your profile either on 541 00:26:12,920 --> 00:26:14,569 pub blondes are on or kid, 542 00:26:14,569 --> 00:26:16,040 then Web of Science will 543 00:26:16,040 --> 00:26:18,229 update it on in return. 544 00:26:18,229 --> 00:26:22,145 So whether you submitted before or after, 545 00:26:22,145 --> 00:26:24,335 It's very good to have it, 546 00:26:24,335 --> 00:26:26,269 to have it's updated 547 00:26:26,269 --> 00:26:27,800 because this will populate 548 00:26:27,800 --> 00:26:32,149 your publications and the citations where 549 00:26:32,149 --> 00:26:36,290 Okay, so here we have the summary, 550 00:26:36,290 --> 00:26:39,125 we have the metrics, 551 00:26:39,125 --> 00:26:40,475 so the number of 552 00:26:40,475 --> 00:26:43,099 publications versus the citations. 553 00:26:43,099 --> 00:26:44,719 And of course, the 554 00:26:44,719 --> 00:26:47,540 publications that we saw in which journals. 555 00:26:47,540 --> 00:26:48,994 So once you do find 556 00:26:48,994 --> 00:26:51,784 a researcher or if it's herself, 557 00:26:51,784 --> 00:26:54,980 you can actually list all the journals that 558 00:26:54,980 --> 00:26:56,510 you've published in so 559 00:26:56,510 --> 00:26:58,670 that if anyone in your fields, 560 00:26:58,670 --> 00:27:01,670 they can also discover those journals. 561 00:27:01,670 --> 00:27:02,779 And we don't only lists 562 00:27:02,779 --> 00:27:04,204 the journals that we index. 563 00:27:04,204 --> 00:27:06,800 For example, this last one we don't index, 564 00:27:06,800 --> 00:27:08,704 but since she's published 565 00:27:08,704 --> 00:27:10,340 in 10 in this journal, 566 00:27:10,340 --> 00:27:13,730 we we still we still put it in the list. 567 00:27:13,730 --> 00:27:16,100 And the peer review activity. 568 00:27:16,100 --> 00:27:19,625 So she's reviewed one, 569 00:27:19,625 --> 00:27:23,120 she's got one peer review in medical care. 570 00:27:23,120 --> 00:27:26,390 And so the journal actually verifies that 571 00:27:26,390 --> 00:27:27,680 she was indeed 572 00:27:27,680 --> 00:27:29,390 a peer reviewer for this journal. 573 00:27:29,390 --> 00:27:31,609 And that's all the information 574 00:27:31,609 --> 00:27:34,654 that is available on the profile of 575 00:27:34,654 --> 00:27:36,620 the peer reviews remain 576 00:27:36,620 --> 00:27:38,405 anonymous and they remain 577 00:27:38,405 --> 00:27:40,489 confidential as they should be. 578 00:27:40,489 --> 00:27:43,759 So here we have her her title. 579 00:27:43,759 --> 00:27:44,900 She is in the mosquito 580 00:27:44,900 --> 00:27:47,705 School of Public Service at USF. 581 00:27:47,705 --> 00:27:50,660 And the total time she was she was cited for 582 00:27:50,660 --> 00:27:52,460 each index to be 583 00:27:52,460 --> 00:27:54,770 used with caution, of course. 584 00:27:54,770 --> 00:27:56,929 And a web of 585 00:27:56,929 --> 00:28:00,815 science researcher ID as well is on there. 586 00:28:00,815 --> 00:28:03,949 But in my author search, 587 00:28:03,949 --> 00:28:06,785 what is interesting is that I can 588 00:28:06,785 --> 00:28:11,344 take these publications and view as a set. 589 00:28:11,344 --> 00:28:13,699 And after the author position 590 00:28:13,699 --> 00:28:15,499 which are also here, 591 00:28:15,499 --> 00:28:17,975 we also have the top coauthors. 592 00:28:17,975 --> 00:28:21,229 So her, her top collaborators 593 00:28:21,229 --> 00:28:25,310 can be also of interest to you if they are, 594 00:28:25,310 --> 00:28:27,859 if you are in the same field or if you're, 595 00:28:27,859 --> 00:28:28,790 if you're looking 596 00:28:28,790 --> 00:28:31,819 at multi-disciplinary research 597 00:28:31,819 --> 00:28:34,069 or, or, or whatnot. 598 00:28:34,069 --> 00:28:35,420 So, and all of these, 599 00:28:35,420 --> 00:28:37,744 again, are also hyperlinked. 600 00:28:37,744 --> 00:28:39,320 So it'll bring me to 601 00:28:39,320 --> 00:28:40,835 the author profile 602 00:28:40,835 --> 00:28:42,829 of this other collaborator. 603 00:28:42,829 --> 00:28:44,119 And so where is he? 604 00:28:44,119 --> 00:28:45,965 He's in Minneapolis. 605 00:28:45,965 --> 00:28:50,615 And he said You Minnesota System and whatnot. 606 00:28:50,615 --> 00:28:53,300 So it's the endless vortex 607 00:28:53,300 --> 00:28:55,579 of collaborators and whatnot. 608 00:28:55,579 --> 00:28:57,439 But I'll show you how to, 609 00:28:57,439 --> 00:29:00,305 to find a collaborator 610 00:29:00,305 --> 00:29:02,959 in a specific field as bells. 611 00:29:02,959 --> 00:29:05,330 So if I'm going to relaunch 612 00:29:05,330 --> 00:29:08,779 my search in the new Web of Science. 613 00:29:08,779 --> 00:29:10,040 I also wanted to show you that 614 00:29:10,040 --> 00:29:14,150 you can actually tweak 615 00:29:14,150 --> 00:29:17,600 your search on this page 616 00:29:17,600 --> 00:29:19,490 and not having to go back 617 00:29:19,490 --> 00:29:21,574 to the search history. 618 00:29:21,574 --> 00:29:23,659 So if I want to change 619 00:29:23,659 --> 00:29:27,920 my two key words and put them in a title, 620 00:29:27,920 --> 00:29:31,160 or if I want to put them in my topic search, 621 00:29:31,160 --> 00:29:33,769 a topic search will go retrieve 622 00:29:33,769 --> 00:29:34,849 these keywords in 623 00:29:34,849 --> 00:29:38,240 the title abstract or keywords, 624 00:29:38,240 --> 00:29:41,855 which are all elements that can help you 625 00:29:41,855 --> 00:29:45,650 find relevant collaborate errors. 626 00:29:45,650 --> 00:29:48,844 So I want to look at, 627 00:29:48,844 --> 00:29:51,560 so I have a quite a bit of results here. 628 00:29:51,560 --> 00:29:53,990 So do I want to refine my search? 629 00:29:53,990 --> 00:29:59,764 So I want to now add New England 630 00:29:59,764 --> 00:30:02,704 to the mix because I'm working 631 00:30:02,704 --> 00:30:05,825 on historical architecture in New England. 632 00:30:05,825 --> 00:30:08,914 So this is now a really refine my search. 633 00:30:08,914 --> 00:30:12,874 So I can go into analyze the results and 634 00:30:12,874 --> 00:30:17,509 take a look at who my, 635 00:30:17,509 --> 00:30:21,305 who the authors are on these topics. 636 00:30:21,305 --> 00:30:22,939 So here I've obviously 637 00:30:22,939 --> 00:30:25,219 refined it very much so, 638 00:30:25,219 --> 00:30:27,589 but in looking at analyze results, 639 00:30:27,589 --> 00:30:29,299 I can go into offers. 640 00:30:29,299 --> 00:30:31,745 I can go into affiliations. 641 00:30:31,745 --> 00:30:33,049 Which affiliations, 642 00:30:33,049 --> 00:30:36,170 which university works on my topic. 643 00:30:36,170 --> 00:30:38,960 If you're looking for a collaborator brain, 644 00:30:38,960 --> 00:30:40,130 if you're a graduate student, 645 00:30:40,130 --> 00:30:42,229 if you're looking for an external reader 646 00:30:42,229 --> 00:30:43,984 on your thesis committee. 647 00:30:43,984 --> 00:30:46,490 And again, the funding. 648 00:30:46,490 --> 00:30:50,584 So who's funding research on this topic? 649 00:30:50,584 --> 00:30:52,819 And open access and whatnot. 650 00:30:52,819 --> 00:30:55,070 So the Web of Science categories, 651 00:30:55,070 --> 00:30:56,344 for example, 652 00:30:56,344 --> 00:31:00,020 are are the categories that, 653 00:31:00,020 --> 00:31:02,450 that the records belong to, 654 00:31:02,450 --> 00:31:05,060 that, that are at the journal level. 655 00:31:05,060 --> 00:31:08,780 So this is quite important to know. 656 00:31:08,780 --> 00:31:12,570 So if I'm looking at the authors, 657 00:31:13,210 --> 00:31:17,330 I'm here and take a look at, 658 00:31:17,330 --> 00:31:19,609 I can select or I can really 659 00:31:19,609 --> 00:31:22,445 focus on one or the other 660 00:31:22,445 --> 00:31:25,280 and and take a look at the records and see if 661 00:31:25,280 --> 00:31:29,130 they are indeed relevant. 662 00:31:29,470 --> 00:31:33,755 So I can go back 663 00:31:33,755 --> 00:31:36,169 and I'm going to 664 00:31:36,169 --> 00:31:39,304 launch my wide search up again. 665 00:31:39,304 --> 00:31:41,840 I can refine my quick filters 666 00:31:41,840 --> 00:31:44,809 here by highly cited paper. 667 00:31:44,809 --> 00:31:48,394 So here I'm refining by citations. 668 00:31:48,394 --> 00:31:56,764 And I can look at if I want, 669 00:31:56,764 --> 00:31:59,765 if I want both 670 00:31:59,765 --> 00:32:03,455 of these keywords in same concept, 671 00:32:03,455 --> 00:32:05,764 I'll have to put them into brackets. 672 00:32:05,764 --> 00:32:07,864 That will reduce my, 673 00:32:07,864 --> 00:32:09,635 my search string and it'll 674 00:32:09,635 --> 00:32:11,720 make it a lot more relevant. 675 00:32:11,720 --> 00:32:15,800 So here I have an author called malate in 676 00:32:15,800 --> 00:32:21,379 sociological review, 555, 45 citation. 677 00:32:21,379 --> 00:32:25,219 So I can, I can sort by relevance. 678 00:32:25,219 --> 00:32:28,369 But each funds to take a look 679 00:32:28,369 --> 00:32:31,280 at what would be a better match for 680 00:32:31,280 --> 00:32:32,690 my topic and to 681 00:32:32,690 --> 00:32:36,560 find the right collaborators or people who 682 00:32:36,560 --> 00:32:39,680 interested in working with me 683 00:32:39,680 --> 00:32:45,244 or in any realm of the scholarly circle. 684 00:32:45,244 --> 00:32:49,190 So here, another thing 685 00:32:49,190 --> 00:32:52,714 is that I can save these to a mark list. 686 00:32:52,714 --> 00:32:53,929 So this is the advantage 687 00:32:53,929 --> 00:32:55,220 of creating your profile. 688 00:32:55,220 --> 00:32:56,840 Once you create your profile in 689 00:32:56,840 --> 00:32:59,135 the classic Web of Science, 690 00:32:59,135 --> 00:33:02,450 you, it'll transfer automatically here. 691 00:33:02,450 --> 00:33:06,140 You'll also have, we also have 692 00:33:06,140 --> 00:33:08,284 lib guides and you can 693 00:33:08,284 --> 00:33:11,315 take a look at how blondes. 694 00:33:11,315 --> 00:33:13,685 We do have a free version of a note 695 00:33:13,685 --> 00:33:16,715 with all Web of Science. 696 00:33:16,715 --> 00:33:18,589 End. 697 00:33:18,589 --> 00:33:20,870 Going back to Web of Science classes. 698 00:33:20,870 --> 00:33:23,705 So here we also have the Resource Center. 699 00:33:23,705 --> 00:33:26,390 You can, you can choose 700 00:33:26,390 --> 00:33:29,135 to have a guided tour if you'd like to. 701 00:33:29,135 --> 00:33:31,189 We have a pen Don't technology, 702 00:33:31,189 --> 00:33:33,469 which will actually give 703 00:33:33,469 --> 00:33:36,184 you a guided tour and can, 704 00:33:36,184 --> 00:33:38,059 and can tell you how to perform 705 00:33:38,059 --> 00:33:40,385 certain tasks or whatnot. 706 00:33:40,385 --> 00:33:44,419 You can also export certain results in Excel. 707 00:33:44,419 --> 00:33:47,524 And now the export has increased. 708 00:33:47,524 --> 00:33:49,280 Finally, from it 500 709 00:33:49,280 --> 00:33:51,590 records to 11000 records. 710 00:33:51,590 --> 00:33:53,780 You can export that to Excel. 711 00:33:53,780 --> 00:33:55,279 And if you wanted to do a 712 00:33:55,279 --> 00:33:58,219 literature review or whatnot, 713 00:33:58,219 --> 00:33:59,870 that could be there. 714 00:33:59,870 --> 00:34:03,650 For example, in this topic, I can, 715 00:34:03,650 --> 00:34:05,540 I can click on 716 00:34:05,540 --> 00:34:07,790 Citation Report and take a look 717 00:34:07,790 --> 00:34:11,750 on how the topic is doing with time. 718 00:34:11,750 --> 00:34:13,564 Obviously, this has been 719 00:34:13,564 --> 00:34:17,569 exponentially growing topic through time. 720 00:34:17,569 --> 00:34:19,535 And here as well, 721 00:34:19,535 --> 00:34:23,930 I can have the list 722 00:34:23,930 --> 00:34:25,910 of records here by the number of 723 00:34:25,910 --> 00:34:28,459 citation in the new interface. 724 00:34:28,459 --> 00:34:30,980 You can take a look at who is citing 725 00:34:30,980 --> 00:34:37,069 these these articles or, or reviews. 726 00:34:37,069 --> 00:34:38,510 And i'm, I'm, I'm using 727 00:34:38,510 --> 00:34:41,539 articles to be generic, 728 00:34:41,539 --> 00:34:44,419 but it could be a book, chapters or whatnot. 729 00:34:44,419 --> 00:34:46,580 So this you can 730 00:34:46,580 --> 00:34:49,130 discover also collaborate through this 731 00:34:49,130 --> 00:34:50,359 because they might not 732 00:34:50,359 --> 00:34:54,365 be in their reference lists more. 733 00:34:54,365 --> 00:34:56,870 However, they can, you can find 734 00:34:56,870 --> 00:34:59,029 other pertinent collaborators 735 00:34:59,029 --> 00:35:01,520 through whoever is citing. 736 00:35:01,520 --> 00:35:03,530 So here you can create, 737 00:35:03,530 --> 00:35:04,669 once you've created your 738 00:35:04,669 --> 00:35:06,124 brilliant search string 739 00:35:06,124 --> 00:35:08,089 by yourself or with your librarian, 740 00:35:08,089 --> 00:35:09,499 you can create an alert. 741 00:35:09,499 --> 00:35:10,849 Whereas every time 742 00:35:10,849 --> 00:35:12,874 Web of Science is updated with 743 00:35:12,874 --> 00:35:16,490 a topic that you are, that you are following. 744 00:35:16,490 --> 00:35:18,950 You'll receive an email 745 00:35:18,950 --> 00:35:21,679 and you can decide on the frequency of this. 746 00:35:21,679 --> 00:35:24,110 You can create an alert. 747 00:35:24,110 --> 00:35:26,330 Your librarian can do so 748 00:35:26,330 --> 00:35:28,399 for yourself or you can do it. 749 00:35:28,399 --> 00:35:33,829 And so it's historical architecture. 750 00:35:33,829 --> 00:35:36,529 And then you can create the alert. 751 00:35:36,529 --> 00:35:38,269 So you can manage the alert. 752 00:35:38,269 --> 00:35:41,929 And C, you have to, 753 00:35:41,929 --> 00:35:45,245 you can choose the frequency of the alert, 754 00:35:45,245 --> 00:35:48,929 whereas it could be weekly or monthly. 755 00:35:50,290 --> 00:35:54,530 And so once I have found, for example, 756 00:35:54,530 --> 00:35:59,629 if I go back to searching my offer, 757 00:35:59,629 --> 00:36:03,034 I can also export 758 00:36:03,034 --> 00:36:06,079 all of their publication here. 759 00:36:06,079 --> 00:36:09,169 So view as a set of results, right? 760 00:36:09,169 --> 00:36:10,339 Or I can click on 761 00:36:10,339 --> 00:36:13,700 the citation report for this author as well. 762 00:36:13,700 --> 00:36:17,690 But I can export all of 763 00:36:17,690 --> 00:36:21,260 Ivan's publications here and I can 764 00:36:21,260 --> 00:36:25,010 save them to a Marked List. 765 00:36:25,010 --> 00:36:29,389 So I'm going to create a list for 766 00:36:29,389 --> 00:36:31,579 Yvonne so that I 767 00:36:31,579 --> 00:36:32,659 can create a list and 768 00:36:32,659 --> 00:36:33,830 then I can create an alert. 769 00:36:33,830 --> 00:36:37,834 So every time something new is published, 770 00:36:37,834 --> 00:36:41,639 I can then add it to my list afterwards. 771 00:36:41,850 --> 00:36:45,910 So here are my refinement options, 772 00:36:45,910 --> 00:36:48,729 my publication years, or in 773 00:36:48,729 --> 00:36:52,449 decreasing document types if I don't want. 774 00:36:52,449 --> 00:36:55,599 For example, I'm only looking at articles. 775 00:36:55,599 --> 00:36:59,484 I can refine and all my options here we'll, 776 00:36:59,484 --> 00:37:03,010 will appear on my refining options here, 777 00:37:03,010 --> 00:37:04,660 Web of Science categories, 778 00:37:04,660 --> 00:37:06,759 and here are my authors again, right? 779 00:37:06,759 --> 00:37:08,949 So if you click see all these are 780 00:37:08,949 --> 00:37:12,069 all the authors that she's 781 00:37:12,069 --> 00:37:14,150 collaborated with 782 00:37:15,210 --> 00:37:18,339 and the affiliations as well. 783 00:37:18,339 --> 00:37:20,334 So if you, for example, 784 00:37:20,334 --> 00:37:24,249 only want to see scholarship from the US, 785 00:37:24,249 --> 00:37:26,149 uk, you can do that. 786 00:37:26,149 --> 00:37:29,269 You can do that in countries and regions. 787 00:37:29,269 --> 00:37:31,220 And you can. Obviously now 788 00:37:31,220 --> 00:37:32,450 I'm looking at her. 789 00:37:32,450 --> 00:37:36,890 So she's only has collaboratives from the US. 790 00:37:36,890 --> 00:37:39,019 But sometimes you want to take 791 00:37:39,019 --> 00:37:42,169 a look at a topic that is very, 792 00:37:42,169 --> 00:37:45,050 very prominent in Scandinavia 793 00:37:45,050 --> 00:37:47,270 or with one of the Scandinavian countries. 794 00:37:47,270 --> 00:37:49,730 And you can choose to look at collaborations 795 00:37:49,730 --> 00:37:52,430 with only a specific country as well, 796 00:37:52,430 --> 00:37:55,400 or at the same time with 797 00:37:55,400 --> 00:38:00,065 a specific institution as well. 798 00:38:00,065 --> 00:38:03,319 So I will take a pause 799 00:38:03,319 --> 00:38:06,869 and see if there are any questions. 800 00:38:08,730 --> 00:38:11,065 Thanks, Marisa. 801 00:38:11,065 --> 00:38:14,080 So far we don't have any questions, 802 00:38:14,080 --> 00:38:17,889 but maybe from folks are typing from it now, 803 00:38:17,889 --> 00:38:19,690 but when you go ahead and 804 00:38:19,690 --> 00:38:25,489 continue on, Okay, Great. 805 00:38:26,280 --> 00:38:29,770 So other fields in 806 00:38:29,770 --> 00:38:32,409 the Web of Science include all. 807 00:38:32,409 --> 00:38:33,639 So these, these are 808 00:38:33,639 --> 00:38:37,105 new fields, are indexing dates. 809 00:38:37,105 --> 00:38:38,934 If you want to look at 810 00:38:38,934 --> 00:38:41,049 certain keywords and only 811 00:38:41,049 --> 00:38:42,549 the abstract and not 812 00:38:42,549 --> 00:38:44,710 title abstracting keywords. 813 00:38:44,710 --> 00:38:47,680 So going back to the full record, 814 00:38:47,680 --> 00:38:53,800 another, another important field 815 00:38:53,800 --> 00:38:54,955 are the keywords. 816 00:38:54,955 --> 00:38:57,445 So here we have author keywords. 817 00:38:57,445 --> 00:38:59,320 These keywords can give you 818 00:38:59,320 --> 00:39:03,340 extra lexicon to, for example, 819 00:39:03,340 --> 00:39:05,860 modify your search and go 820 00:39:05,860 --> 00:39:07,749 back to your search string and say, Oh, 821 00:39:07,749 --> 00:39:09,700 I didn't think of, of 822 00:39:09,700 --> 00:39:13,329 adding architectural theory to my search. 823 00:39:13,329 --> 00:39:16,750 Or architectural historiography, 824 00:39:16,750 --> 00:39:19,480 which actually is what 825 00:39:19,480 --> 00:39:23,439 happens when you truncate early enough within 826 00:39:23,439 --> 00:39:24,924 the word to get 827 00:39:24,924 --> 00:39:28,660 various variants of the same word, right? 828 00:39:28,660 --> 00:39:30,505 So here we have climate, 829 00:39:30,505 --> 00:39:33,469 and here is how we do 830 00:39:33,469 --> 00:39:37,324 link all of so here the authors, 831 00:39:37,324 --> 00:39:38,749 all of these authors, 832 00:39:38,749 --> 00:39:39,950 so not all of them. 833 00:39:39,950 --> 00:39:42,620 So here we have 10 authors on 834 00:39:42,620 --> 00:39:45,769 the publication and five 835 00:39:45,769 --> 00:39:47,630 of them had OR gate numbers. 836 00:39:47,630 --> 00:39:50,089 So whether there's only one or whether all 837 00:39:50,089 --> 00:39:52,745 of them have an identifier. 838 00:39:52,745 --> 00:39:54,830 This is where this is the field where 839 00:39:54,830 --> 00:39:57,934 we include their identifier. 840 00:39:57,934 --> 00:39:59,674 And these are hyperlinked. 841 00:39:59,674 --> 00:40:01,024 So you can actually 842 00:40:01,024 --> 00:40:03,379 click and it'll bring you to there 843 00:40:03,379 --> 00:40:05,810 or to the org page 844 00:40:05,810 --> 00:40:08,104 of the author and question. 845 00:40:08,104 --> 00:40:12,230 Most of these profiles in the kit are public. 846 00:40:12,230 --> 00:40:15,170 But sometimes they may be private, 847 00:40:15,170 --> 00:40:16,564 but usually people want 848 00:40:16,564 --> 00:40:19,444 to have this accessible. 849 00:40:19,444 --> 00:40:23,030 So we have employment, work and publications. 850 00:40:23,030 --> 00:40:26,240 So the work and ID sometimes you may 851 00:40:26,240 --> 00:40:28,024 include in your signature, 852 00:40:28,024 --> 00:40:29,915 your email signature. 853 00:40:29,915 --> 00:40:32,719 So various ways this way. 854 00:40:32,719 --> 00:40:34,984 Miranda, here we have yes. 855 00:40:34,984 --> 00:40:35,569 Sorry. 856 00:40:35,569 --> 00:40:36,410 We have a couple of 857 00:40:36,410 --> 00:40:37,519 questions now and I wondered 858 00:40:37,519 --> 00:40:39,500 array you wanted to take a couple of those? 859 00:40:39,500 --> 00:40:41,810 Yes, absolutely. Go ahead. 860 00:40:41,810 --> 00:40:42,800 Okay. 861 00:40:42,800 --> 00:40:47,869 One is is our orchid number 862 00:40:47,869 --> 00:40:50,149 associated with Web of 863 00:40:50,149 --> 00:40:54,180 Science or only the researcher ID. 864 00:40:54,180 --> 00:40:56,229 O orchid as well. 865 00:40:56,229 --> 00:40:57,909 So we, we, we, 866 00:40:57,909 --> 00:41:01,810 if we have an updating relationship with 867 00:41:01,810 --> 00:41:06,099 both Researcher ID is our creation actually. 868 00:41:06,099 --> 00:41:07,179 And we actually gave 869 00:41:07,179 --> 00:41:09,985 the code in 2012 to orchid. 870 00:41:09,985 --> 00:41:12,609 An orchid was created based on research ID. 871 00:41:12,609 --> 00:41:16,015 But we, we index both. 872 00:41:16,015 --> 00:41:17,485 So just pick one. 873 00:41:17,485 --> 00:41:20,079 We're happy when researchers have 874 00:41:20,079 --> 00:41:23,169 one and it is religiously populated. 875 00:41:23,169 --> 00:41:26,500 So that's the big challenge. 876 00:41:26,500 --> 00:41:27,609 So we do, we do 877 00:41:27,609 --> 00:41:29,349 index books, as you can see here. 878 00:41:29,349 --> 00:41:30,460 Here there's two columns. 879 00:41:30,460 --> 00:41:32,379 It's just that these authors 880 00:41:32,379 --> 00:41:35,079 all have kids and not researcher IDs. 881 00:41:35,079 --> 00:41:36,780 But we have a yes. 882 00:41:36,780 --> 00:41:38,059 Perfect. 883 00:41:38,059 --> 00:41:40,910 The next question or if it's 884 00:41:40,910 --> 00:41:43,625 a question and a comment, it says, 885 00:41:43,625 --> 00:41:46,729 please discuss a bit more 886 00:41:46,729 --> 00:41:50,149 about the citations that authors may cite, 887 00:41:50,149 --> 00:41:52,399 but you do not index. 888 00:41:52,399 --> 00:41:54,875 Could any of these authors 889 00:41:54,875 --> 00:42:00,240 citations be from predatory journals? 890 00:42:00,460 --> 00:42:04,985 Okay, So that's an excellent question. 891 00:42:04,985 --> 00:42:06,185 So we do have 892 00:42:06,185 --> 00:42:10,054 very rigorous quality control 893 00:42:10,054 --> 00:42:12,335 and Web of Science and every year, 894 00:42:12,335 --> 00:42:14,090 whether it's a new journal, 895 00:42:14,090 --> 00:42:15,424 but every year we 896 00:42:15,424 --> 00:42:19,819 do have journals, depressions. 897 00:42:19,819 --> 00:42:21,469 There are not many out of 898 00:42:21,469 --> 00:42:23,419 the 21 thousand journals 899 00:42:23,419 --> 00:42:26,104 that we index and core collection. 900 00:42:26,104 --> 00:42:28,999 Some years we'll have 13. 901 00:42:28,999 --> 00:42:31,850 Some areas will have about 20 suppressions. 902 00:42:31,850 --> 00:42:37,760 Suppressions occur when either the journal is 903 00:42:37,760 --> 00:42:41,164 misbehaving and that's either 904 00:42:41,164 --> 00:42:44,240 it's self citing too much. 905 00:42:44,240 --> 00:42:47,779 So self-citations are normal. 906 00:42:47,779 --> 00:42:49,699 And normal phenomena. 907 00:42:49,699 --> 00:42:51,259 We build our own research 908 00:42:51,259 --> 00:42:53,240 and the smaller the field, 909 00:42:53,240 --> 00:42:55,279 the higher the self 910 00:42:55,279 --> 00:42:57,800 citation, because we're a, 911 00:42:57,800 --> 00:43:00,334 we're building on our own research and we're 912 00:43:00,334 --> 00:43:03,065 going to cite or previous work BY, 913 00:43:03,065 --> 00:43:04,400 we're often working with 914 00:43:04,400 --> 00:43:06,154 the same collaborators, 915 00:43:06,154 --> 00:43:09,110 must have most of our career. 916 00:43:09,110 --> 00:43:12,349 So that also counts as a self citation. 917 00:43:12,349 --> 00:43:14,360 But in larger fields, 918 00:43:14,360 --> 00:43:16,999 the self citation percentage. 919 00:43:16,999 --> 00:43:20,000 A lower tolerance from our editorial team, 920 00:43:20,000 --> 00:43:25,709 and this is when a journal may be suppressed. 921 00:43:25,990 --> 00:43:30,815 And also so we do include all citations. 922 00:43:30,815 --> 00:43:33,739 Even when, for example, 923 00:43:33,739 --> 00:43:35,075 if I look here, 924 00:43:35,075 --> 00:43:38,584 I'll go back search results. 925 00:43:38,584 --> 00:43:41,284 Sorry, I went too far. 926 00:43:41,284 --> 00:43:43,609 If I click by 927 00:43:43,609 --> 00:43:47,089 relevance and I do highest to lowest. 928 00:43:47,089 --> 00:43:49,070 Okay, so this paper 929 00:43:49,070 --> 00:43:52,339 has all of these citations. 930 00:43:52,339 --> 00:43:54,259 We might not index all of them, 931 00:43:54,259 --> 00:43:57,065 but we will include them in the list. 932 00:43:57,065 --> 00:43:59,749 And if something, if 933 00:43:59,749 --> 00:44:03,139 we don't have a citation in our list, 934 00:44:03,139 --> 00:44:05,030 because we are very, 935 00:44:05,030 --> 00:44:06,964 very religious to the manuscript. 936 00:44:06,964 --> 00:44:08,359 So if it's on the manuscript, 937 00:44:08,359 --> 00:44:10,985 even if it's an item we don't index, 938 00:44:10,985 --> 00:44:12,335 it should be on there. 939 00:44:12,335 --> 00:44:14,509 It's just that it might have 940 00:44:14,509 --> 00:44:17,360 a lot less fields. 941 00:44:17,360 --> 00:44:18,590 Or for example, we 942 00:44:18,590 --> 00:44:21,904 don't index trade publication 943 00:44:21,904 --> 00:44:23,990 or gray literature which 944 00:44:23,990 --> 00:44:26,914 our government reports or whatnot. 945 00:44:26,914 --> 00:44:28,115 But we should still, 946 00:44:28,115 --> 00:44:30,770 you should still see the citation on there. 947 00:44:30,770 --> 00:44:32,239 But do let us know if you 948 00:44:32,239 --> 00:44:33,560 think that there was 949 00:44:33,560 --> 00:44:35,375 a citation that doesn't appear 950 00:44:35,375 --> 00:44:37,819 in the cited article list. 951 00:44:37,819 --> 00:44:39,710 Let us know and you can let us 952 00:44:39,710 --> 00:44:42,994 know either eye contacting 953 00:44:42,994 --> 00:44:46,339 or here there's there's a place where you 954 00:44:46,339 --> 00:44:50,520 can submit a correction on the full record. 955 00:44:50,950 --> 00:44:52,565 Okay. 956 00:44:52,565 --> 00:44:57,095 We have a couple more questions. 957 00:44:57,095 --> 00:45:00,724 One is Can you show 958 00:45:00,724 --> 00:45:02,254 how people can claim 959 00:45:02,254 --> 00:45:04,729 their Web of Science profile? 960 00:45:04,729 --> 00:45:07,250 Yes, absolutely. 961 00:45:07,250 --> 00:45:11,254 So once you perform your search 962 00:45:11,254 --> 00:45:16,379 with with your name, 963 00:45:17,650 --> 00:45:22,670 it's basically let me take let me take 964 00:45:22,670 --> 00:45:28,230 one of her collaborators here that had not. 965 00:45:28,600 --> 00:45:31,519 And I'll show you. 966 00:45:31,519 --> 00:45:33,830 So bonds clever. 967 00:45:33,830 --> 00:45:35,494 So she's claimed hers 968 00:45:35,494 --> 00:45:37,639 and all she had to do is click. 969 00:45:37,639 --> 00:45:39,980 I'm claiming so one 970 00:45:39,980 --> 00:45:41,210 of her collaborators here. 971 00:45:41,210 --> 00:45:44,839 So, so this, this is how you would claim it. 972 00:45:44,839 --> 00:45:46,219 So once you find 973 00:45:46,219 --> 00:45:49,850 yourself and you want to know, 974 00:45:49,850 --> 00:45:53,540 you want to check that everything is correct. 975 00:45:53,540 --> 00:45:55,549 If it's not, you can 976 00:45:55,549 --> 00:45:57,755 submit a correction here. 977 00:45:57,755 --> 00:46:00,079 But this is how you would claim your record 978 00:46:00,079 --> 00:46:02,750 and of course you would have to be signed in. 979 00:46:02,750 --> 00:46:04,279 This is our quality control 980 00:46:04,279 --> 00:46:06,109 because not anyone can do that, 981 00:46:06,109 --> 00:46:08,509 but only Eric, deeper, 982 00:46:08,509 --> 00:46:10,489 deeper ink here can do this. 983 00:46:10,489 --> 00:46:12,109 So are you this author very 984 00:46:12,109 --> 00:46:13,759 far you work control how your name, 985 00:46:13,759 --> 00:46:15,590 title, institution, and profile, 986 00:46:15,590 --> 00:46:17,300 and then claim land, record. 987 00:46:17,300 --> 00:46:19,729 The Wednesday. I will press on here. 988 00:46:19,729 --> 00:46:21,785 It wouldn't work because I'm Marissa, 989 00:46:21,785 --> 00:46:23,870 I can claim my record and it'll 990 00:46:23,870 --> 00:46:25,595 bring me to the pub lines. 991 00:46:25,595 --> 00:46:29,945 Because if I don't have a pub lens profile. 992 00:46:29,945 --> 00:46:32,780 It will create a researcher ID on 993 00:46:32,780 --> 00:46:34,489 pipelines automatically 994 00:46:34,489 --> 00:46:36,259 by cleaning my record. 995 00:46:36,259 --> 00:46:38,210 I hope that answers your question. 996 00:46:38,210 --> 00:46:39,380 Awesome. Thank you. 997 00:46:39,380 --> 00:46:39,829 Okay. 998 00:46:39,829 --> 00:46:43,114 So this one has a lot going on. 999 00:46:43,114 --> 00:46:45,469 So it says I'm 1000 00:46:45,469 --> 00:46:49,414 looking at my own profile in pub lawns, 1001 00:46:49,414 --> 00:46:51,110 and it's missing several 1002 00:46:51,110 --> 00:46:52,955 papers I've authored. 1003 00:46:52,955 --> 00:46:57,769 I've just imported them using their DOIs, 1004 00:46:57,769 --> 00:47:00,170 but no information seems 1005 00:47:00,170 --> 00:47:01,924 to be coming in with them. 1006 00:47:01,924 --> 00:47:04,955 Example, number of citations. 1007 00:47:04,955 --> 00:47:06,725 Why is this? 1008 00:47:06,725 --> 00:47:08,510 Can I change that? 1009 00:47:08,510 --> 00:47:11,735 And then they also follow that up by thing. 1010 00:47:11,735 --> 00:47:15,500 Also, the number of citations noted on 1011 00:47:15,500 --> 00:47:18,260 my articles are lower than what is 1012 00:47:18,260 --> 00:47:21,259 shown and Google Scholar, while yeah. 1013 00:47:21,259 --> 00:47:22,160 Okay. 1014 00:47:22,160 --> 00:47:25,910 So Google Scholar is not a curated database. 1015 00:47:25,910 --> 00:47:29,329 Even though the citations are not DD, 1016 00:47:29,329 --> 00:47:32,089 blue gate it asks about the difference 1017 00:47:32,089 --> 00:47:36,109 between google Scholar is algorithmic, 1018 00:47:36,109 --> 00:47:37,700 whereas Web of Science or 1019 00:47:37,700 --> 00:47:40,820 Scopus or any other citation index, 1020 00:47:40,820 --> 00:47:43,639 these are curated and their associated with 1021 00:47:43,639 --> 00:47:46,489 each citation has an actual records to it. 1022 00:47:46,489 --> 00:47:48,769 So it's normal that on Google Scholar, 1023 00:47:48,769 --> 00:47:55,504 you may get more citations that then 1024 00:47:55,504 --> 00:47:57,409 on your pub lines because 1025 00:47:57,409 --> 00:47:59,329 problems will have to really 1026 00:47:59,329 --> 00:48:00,529 identify where 1027 00:48:00,529 --> 00:48:03,710 that one citation is coming from. 1028 00:48:03,710 --> 00:48:09,454 But however you can definitely perform. 1029 00:48:09,454 --> 00:48:12,230 If you if you send me you 1030 00:48:12,230 --> 00:48:14,269 can send me an email and saying if 1031 00:48:14,269 --> 00:48:15,619 there's something missing on 1032 00:48:15,619 --> 00:48:20,255 your pipelines profile or your kid, 1033 00:48:20,255 --> 00:48:25,250 if by updating your if it's a researcher ID, 1034 00:48:25,250 --> 00:48:26,749 you have been couple lines is 1035 00:48:26,749 --> 00:48:28,865 where this is housed. 1036 00:48:28,865 --> 00:48:30,350 If it's working, you can 1037 00:48:30,350 --> 00:48:32,629 update it in your org it and I 1038 00:48:32,629 --> 00:48:34,999 will include some information 1039 00:48:34,999 --> 00:48:36,934 on how to do that. 1040 00:48:36,934 --> 00:48:40,700 And that will automatically update 1041 00:48:40,700 --> 00:48:42,350 your public profile once 1042 00:48:42,350 --> 00:48:44,660 you updated that way. 1043 00:48:44,660 --> 00:48:46,985 To hope that makes sense. 1044 00:48:46,985 --> 00:48:47,960 Awesome. 1045 00:48:47,960 --> 00:48:53,030 Thank you. Okay, So our next question says, 1046 00:48:53,030 --> 00:48:56,150 My pal blondes profile 1047 00:48:56,150 --> 00:48:59,540 is linked to a former institution. 1048 00:48:59,540 --> 00:49:01,070 I no longer have 1049 00:49:01,070 --> 00:49:03,740 access to that university email. 1050 00:49:03,740 --> 00:49:06,665 How do I claim my record? 1051 00:49:06,665 --> 00:49:08,089 Okay. 1052 00:49:08,089 --> 00:49:09,349 So first of all, 1053 00:49:09,349 --> 00:49:13,445 we're going to have to perform a change on 1054 00:49:13,445 --> 00:49:16,159 your author profiles so that you could 1055 00:49:16,159 --> 00:49:20,129 do directly on here. 1056 00:49:21,940 --> 00:49:24,575 So the error, 1057 00:49:24,575 --> 00:49:28,430 because once you've claimed your profile, 1058 00:49:28,430 --> 00:49:32,795 nobody else can, can perform corrections. 1059 00:49:32,795 --> 00:49:35,584 So here for example, 1060 00:49:35,584 --> 00:49:37,490 here all of the affiliation. 1061 00:49:37,490 --> 00:49:39,815 So if you want to update your affiliation, 1062 00:49:39,815 --> 00:49:43,829 you can do so from your profile. 1063 00:49:43,900 --> 00:49:47,779 Showing you here. 1064 00:49:47,779 --> 00:49:56,999 This is the bottom claim, my record. 1065 00:49:57,640 --> 00:50:00,094 So you can you can 1066 00:50:00,094 --> 00:50:01,970 submit a correction right here. 1067 00:50:01,970 --> 00:50:03,320 So see here it 1068 00:50:03,320 --> 00:50:05,090 already says Euhemerus a recoil. 1069 00:50:05,090 --> 00:50:08,779 You can't. And so you can submit a correction 1070 00:50:08,779 --> 00:50:10,685 and you can go ahead and 1071 00:50:10,685 --> 00:50:13,894 add your recent affiliation. 1072 00:50:13,894 --> 00:50:17,720 And it's two, and there's actually humans. 1073 00:50:17,720 --> 00:50:18,889 It's not algorithmic. 1074 00:50:18,889 --> 00:50:20,495 There we have humans 1075 00:50:20,495 --> 00:50:22,250 that will update that for 1076 00:50:22,250 --> 00:50:26,669 you and therefore update your entire profile. 1077 00:50:27,430 --> 00:50:29,809 And so you can, you can 1078 00:50:29,809 --> 00:50:31,520 then sign in and create 1079 00:50:31,520 --> 00:50:33,320 your your Web of Science 1080 00:50:33,320 --> 00:50:37,370 with with your new affiliation as well. 1081 00:50:37,370 --> 00:50:39,124 Great. Thanks, Marissa. 1082 00:50:39,124 --> 00:50:41,225 That's all the questions we have so far. 1083 00:50:41,225 --> 00:50:42,604 So good. 1084 00:50:42,604 --> 00:50:44,300 I'll let you carry on. 1085 00:50:44,300 --> 00:50:45,319 Good. 1086 00:50:45,319 --> 00:50:50,660 Okay. Here we go. 1087 00:50:50,660 --> 00:50:55,340 So this is a good, actually, a good example. 1088 00:50:55,340 --> 00:50:56,990 Sorry, I wanted to go back to 1089 00:50:56,990 --> 00:51:00,005 Eric's profile here on 1090 00:51:00,005 --> 00:51:01,489 all of your organizations. 1091 00:51:01,489 --> 00:51:03,680 So he probably started 1092 00:51:03,680 --> 00:51:06,619 publishing in grad school. 1093 00:51:06,619 --> 00:51:09,215 And then every time 1094 00:51:09,215 --> 00:51:10,670 you have a different 1095 00:51:10,670 --> 00:51:12,259 affiliation and you could be 1096 00:51:12,259 --> 00:51:14,195 cross appointed as well 1097 00:51:14,195 --> 00:51:16,910 with another institution or received 1098 00:51:16,910 --> 00:51:18,859 a grant from while you were 1099 00:51:18,859 --> 00:51:20,239 a visiting professor or 1100 00:51:20,239 --> 00:51:21,815 visiting lecturer somewhere else. 1101 00:51:21,815 --> 00:51:25,685 And the grant was conditional to you 1102 00:51:25,685 --> 00:51:27,499 affiliating yourself with 1103 00:51:27,499 --> 00:51:30,139 this secondary affiliation. 1104 00:51:30,139 --> 00:51:32,390 So there's, there's a lot of 1105 00:51:32,390 --> 00:51:34,520 hairy details of that can 1106 00:51:34,520 --> 00:51:38,074 really make it complex. 1107 00:51:38,074 --> 00:51:40,129 But this is why our new algorithm 1108 00:51:40,129 --> 00:51:41,749 is that 96 percent. 1109 00:51:41,749 --> 00:51:44,749 So it really should disambiguate. 1110 00:51:44,749 --> 00:51:46,804 If you do get more, 1111 00:51:46,804 --> 00:51:49,460 too many, too many hits, 1112 00:51:49,460 --> 00:51:51,710 it will really give you different. 1113 00:51:51,710 --> 00:51:54,424 I'll give you an example here. 1114 00:51:54,424 --> 00:51:58,890 One of our nutritions hearing. 1115 00:52:01,000 --> 00:52:06,360 I mean, we have his profile. 1116 00:52:07,480 --> 00:52:10,729 You have three versions of this profile 1117 00:52:10,729 --> 00:52:13,490 even though he's claimed his profile. 1118 00:52:13,490 --> 00:52:17,104 So Vincent here, if this is the same person, 1119 00:52:17,104 --> 00:52:18,350 this is the same and we 1120 00:52:18,350 --> 00:52:20,344 have the same affiliation. 1121 00:52:20,344 --> 00:52:21,919 There are 26 on 1122 00:52:21,919 --> 00:52:25,774 here because these are from a proceedings 1123 00:52:25,774 --> 00:52:31,624 and this is we have this one straggler here, 1124 00:52:31,624 --> 00:52:34,054 even though he's claimed his profile. 1125 00:52:34,054 --> 00:52:37,100 Here we have three bits on a heap. 1126 00:52:37,100 --> 00:52:40,039 Yeah, so these are the organization. 1127 00:52:40,039 --> 00:52:41,389 So if it does get hairy, 1128 00:52:41,389 --> 00:52:44,180 a lot of Asian names will give you 1129 00:52:44,180 --> 00:52:45,440 a lot of results even though 1130 00:52:45,440 --> 00:52:48,065 they're completely different people. 1131 00:52:48,065 --> 00:52:51,695 And so the subject categories are also 1132 00:52:51,695 --> 00:52:55,339 an option to refine and organizations, 1133 00:52:55,339 --> 00:52:56,389 and you don't have to know 1134 00:52:56,389 --> 00:52:58,504 that the most recent organization, 1135 00:52:58,504 --> 00:53:00,124 that's the beauty of it. You can. 1136 00:53:00,124 --> 00:53:03,349 Well, I thought he was a XYZ University 1137 00:53:03,349 --> 00:53:04,699 but he's no longer there. 1138 00:53:04,699 --> 00:53:05,389 It doesn't matter. 1139 00:53:05,389 --> 00:53:07,774 It will be list it should be listed on here. 1140 00:53:07,774 --> 00:53:10,535 And you should find so look at all the 1141 00:53:10,535 --> 00:53:12,679 so these are all the affiliations 1142 00:53:12,679 --> 00:53:14,540 that he's had. 1143 00:53:14,540 --> 00:53:17,480 So you can always 1144 00:53:17,480 --> 00:53:20,000 do the refinement through here. 1145 00:53:20,000 --> 00:53:22,819 That's all I have for today. 1146 00:53:22,819 --> 00:53:25,940 Please send any further questions 1147 00:53:25,940 --> 00:53:28,249 either via Sarah or 1148 00:53:28,249 --> 00:53:30,995 directly to myself through my email. 1149 00:53:30,995 --> 00:53:33,320 I'll also include other resources. 1150 00:53:33,320 --> 00:53:35,240 We do have lib guides and we 1151 00:53:35,240 --> 00:53:38,839 do have researcher and 1152 00:53:38,839 --> 00:53:41,870 author resources on there that I'll add 1153 00:53:41,870 --> 00:53:46,690 on for any anymore questions. 1154 00:53:46,690 --> 00:53:49,225 Thank you, Marissa. 1155 00:53:49,225 --> 00:53:51,774 That was a wonderful presentation. 1156 00:53:51,774 --> 00:53:54,189 We do have a couple more minutes 1157 00:53:54,189 --> 00:53:55,585 to take a couple of questions. 1158 00:53:55,585 --> 00:53:57,700 If there are some if 1159 00:53:57,700 --> 00:53:59,020 we for some reason 1160 00:53:59,020 --> 00:54:00,639 run out of time to get to your question, 1161 00:54:00,639 --> 00:54:02,559 as Marissa said, we're happy to follow 1162 00:54:02,559 --> 00:54:05,959 up via e-mail to answer those for you all. 1163 00:54:06,240 --> 00:54:09,370 So just submit your questions to 1164 00:54:09,370 --> 00:54:12,415 the chat if you have them and we have one. 1165 00:54:12,415 --> 00:54:16,510 It says, it's not clear to me what 1166 00:54:16,510 --> 00:54:19,240 the revenue generation mechanism 1167 00:54:19,240 --> 00:54:21,084 is for this service, 1168 00:54:21,084 --> 00:54:22,915 which is free to authors, 1169 00:54:22,915 --> 00:54:26,150 could there be conflicts of interest? 1170 00:54:26,260 --> 00:54:30,150 I don't understand the question. 1171 00:54:30,460 --> 00:54:36,360 For for the author position on records. 1172 00:54:38,410 --> 00:54:41,190 Sherm. 1173 00:54:43,600 --> 00:54:45,575 Maybe. 1174 00:54:45,575 --> 00:54:47,089 Well, worst case. 1175 00:54:47,089 --> 00:54:48,424 We can. 1176 00:54:48,424 --> 00:54:52,049 How does Web of Science make money? 1177 00:54:52,930 --> 00:54:55,745 Maybe clarify, okay. 1178 00:54:55,745 --> 00:54:57,259 This is a subscription, 1179 00:54:57,259 --> 00:55:00,484 so this is a subscription-based. 1180 00:55:00,484 --> 00:55:05,959 So US I'm subscribes to you web of Science, 1181 00:55:05,959 --> 00:55:10,939 and then you get to have the access through 1182 00:55:10,939 --> 00:55:17,045 your email and password that you can create. 1183 00:55:17,045 --> 00:55:19,100 So all of the resources 1184 00:55:19,100 --> 00:55:21,380 that the library subscribes to you 1185 00:55:21,380 --> 00:55:22,775 have access with 1186 00:55:22,775 --> 00:55:25,190 your institutional affiliation, 1187 00:55:25,190 --> 00:55:27,619 e-mail or phone. 1188 00:55:27,619 --> 00:55:29,810 Thank you. They fed banks. 1189 00:55:29,810 --> 00:55:33,005 So it's universe that eBay for very helpful. 1190 00:55:33,005 --> 00:55:34,309 Yeah, If we also 1191 00:55:34,309 --> 00:55:35,719 have government agencies that 1192 00:55:35,719 --> 00:55:39,500 subscribe and in an industry, corporations. 1193 00:55:39,500 --> 00:55:45,930 But universities are, I mean, users for sure. 1194 00:55:47,440 --> 00:55:52,220 Okay, So unless I'm missing any, 1195 00:55:52,220 --> 00:55:54,680 I don't see any more questions. 1196 00:55:54,680 --> 00:55:57,454 And we're almost out of time. 1197 00:55:57,454 --> 00:56:02,165 So I will go ahead and invite you all 1198 00:56:02,165 --> 00:56:04,669 to participate in 1199 00:56:04,669 --> 00:56:07,279 a three minute anonymous survey 1200 00:56:07,279 --> 00:56:09,049 about today's event. 1201 00:56:09,049 --> 00:56:11,480 You can do that by clicking the link in 1202 00:56:11,480 --> 00:56:14,989 the chat that was just submitted by Tracy. 1203 00:56:14,989 --> 00:56:17,209 And it will say, 1204 00:56:17,209 --> 00:56:19,459 thank you so much to 1205 00:56:19,459 --> 00:56:23,885 Marissa for presenting this to us. 1206 00:56:23,885 --> 00:56:26,569 And thank you to Sarah for 1207 00:56:26,569 --> 00:56:29,969 joining us to introduce Marissa. 1208 00:56:31,210 --> 00:56:35,000 Thank you all for attending. 1209 00:56:35,000 --> 00:56:37,790 And we hope you enjoyed it. 1210 00:56:37,790 --> 00:56:39,440 Morris is going to be back with us and 1211 00:56:39,440 --> 00:56:42,079 two weeks to present 1212 00:56:42,079 --> 00:56:46,624 our final workshop called your next big idea. 1213 00:56:46,624 --> 00:56:49,129 So be sure to check in for that. 1214 00:56:49,129 --> 00:56:52,175 And as we mentioned 1215 00:56:52,175 --> 00:56:53,779 at the beginning of this session, 1216 00:56:53,779 --> 00:56:55,624 we will be sending 1217 00:56:55,624 --> 00:56:58,775 more registration e-mails for all of you all. 1218 00:56:58,775 --> 00:57:00,680 So for all the events, 1219 00:57:00,680 --> 00:57:02,704 be on the lookout for those, 1220 00:57:02,704 --> 00:57:05,209 and register and write 1221 00:57:05,209 --> 00:57:08,239 your colleagues and students to join us. 1222 00:57:08,239 --> 00:57:11,749 And that is all we have for today. 1223 00:57:11,749 --> 00:57:14,195 Unless there's any last minute questions, 1224 00:57:14,195 --> 00:57:16,400 we'll finish up. 1225 00:57:16,400 --> 00:57:18,890 Thank you for a great attendance, 1226 00:57:18,890 --> 00:57:21,469 thank for the organ to the organizers to have 1227 00:57:21,469 --> 00:57:24,230 these great, great sessions. 1228 00:57:24,230 --> 00:57:27,170 These are very, very helpful. 1229 00:57:27,170 --> 00:57:30,559 Awesome. Looks like we're all fat though. 1230 00:57:30,559 --> 00:57:31,565 Thanks everyone. 1231 00:57:31,565 --> 00:57:33,094 Have a great day. 1232 00:57:33,094 --> 00:57:36,000 Thank you. Same to you.