2009
DOI: 10.1080/19338240903293004
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A 30-Year Citation Analysis of Bibliometric Trends at theArchives of Environmental Health, 1975–2004

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citations
Cited by 31 publications
(19 citation statements)
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References 132 publications
(125 reference statements)
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“…Given the rise of bibliometric indicators in assessing longitudinal journal performance, 24 the fourth article describes a citation-based analysis of the longest-running and perhaps most famous incarnation of the AEOH, the Archives of Environmental Health (AEH), which ran between 1960 and 2004. 25 This complements a previous paper from the AEOH, 26 where a bibliometric analysis of 5 contemporary EOH journals between 1985 and 2006 was described in detail.…”
supporting
confidence: 62%
“…Given the rise of bibliometric indicators in assessing longitudinal journal performance, 24 the fourth article describes a citation-based analysis of the longest-running and perhaps most famous incarnation of the AEOH, the Archives of Environmental Health (AEH), which ran between 1960 and 2004. 25 This complements a previous paper from the AEOH, 26 where a bibliometric analysis of 5 contemporary EOH journals between 1985 and 2006 was described in detail.…”
supporting
confidence: 62%
“…Though environmental health literature has been studied previously, the research has been to determine productivity and reach [3,4]. It has also been studied in tandem with occupational health [20,33], which is a related, but distinct, discipline. For evidence of this, one need only look at the "core" journals established in Smith's two-part study of occupational health and medicine journals; only one of the five titles established as core to occupational health using multiple methodologies.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Individual articles' citedness varied widely, however; the 4 articles falling more squarely into environmental health received between 44.8% and 77.0% of all citations within 10 years of publication. The more occupational health-themed article received only 12.6% of total citations within 10 years [20]. Looking at the 7 most popularly cited articles from 1961 to 1974, Smith found that only 1 of the articles had more than 50% of its citations within 10 years and that maximum citation density occurred between 10 and 15 years [21].…”
Section: Cited Journalsmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Through citation analysis, citation index provides journal ranking by giving information about what articles, themes, and topics were being published, cited, or ignored and also offers unique insight into a particular journal and provides data on historical trends, immediacy index, cited half-life of journals etc. [36] Citation analysis helps to know the Journal Impact Factor (JIF), Author Self-Citation (ASC) and Journal Self-Citation (JSC). Citation index also helps to determine the latest areas of research through bibliometric indicators.…”
Section: Journal Citation Reportsmentioning
confidence: 99%