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Submerged or partially floating seagrasses in marine or brackish waters form productive seagrass beds, feeding grounds for a rich and varied associated biota, play key ecological roles in mitigating climate change and provide ecosystem services for humanity. The objective of this study was to perform a temporal quali- and quantitative analysis on the scientific production on seagrasses in the Atlantic Ocean during last 64 years (1960 to 2024) through defined workflow by scientometric analysis on Scopus database. Publications in this database date back to 1969, comprising a total of 3.482 scientific articles, primary focused on seagrass ecology. These articles were published in 574 distinct peer-reviewed scientific ecological journals, and are divided into four periods based on the number of articles, keywords and biograms, with an average annual increase of 8.28% in the number of articles published. Zostera marina, Halodule wrightii and Thalassia testudinum were the most researched species, especially in Atlantic coastal areas of Europe and North/Central America. Studies on seagrasses along the Atlantic coast have been well consolidated by a few authors with prolific scientific output, but much of the research has been conducted by non-specialists who published only one or a few articles. We also found that researches from each continent tend to focus on specific topics: North America researches investigated future climate change scenarios and seagrass ecology, while those from Europe prioritize on restoration plans. Additionaly, European researchers from Europe predominantly collaborate with local scientists, a trend also observed among American researches. This indicates a need for increase research and scientific production in the South Atlantic region.
Submerged or partially floating seagrasses in marine or brackish waters form productive seagrass beds, feeding grounds for a rich and varied associated biota, play key ecological roles in mitigating climate change and provide ecosystem services for humanity. The objective of this study was to perform a temporal quali- and quantitative analysis on the scientific production on seagrasses in the Atlantic Ocean during last 64 years (1960 to 2024) through defined workflow by scientometric analysis on Scopus database. Publications in this database date back to 1969, comprising a total of 3.482 scientific articles, primary focused on seagrass ecology. These articles were published in 574 distinct peer-reviewed scientific ecological journals, and are divided into four periods based on the number of articles, keywords and biograms, with an average annual increase of 8.28% in the number of articles published. Zostera marina, Halodule wrightii and Thalassia testudinum were the most researched species, especially in Atlantic coastal areas of Europe and North/Central America. Studies on seagrasses along the Atlantic coast have been well consolidated by a few authors with prolific scientific output, but much of the research has been conducted by non-specialists who published only one or a few articles. We also found that researches from each continent tend to focus on specific topics: North America researches investigated future climate change scenarios and seagrass ecology, while those from Europe prioritize on restoration plans. Additionaly, European researchers from Europe predominantly collaborate with local scientists, a trend also observed among American researches. This indicates a need for increase research and scientific production in the South Atlantic region.
Chat GPT, which suddenly entered our lives at the end of 2022, is a large language model and has attracted the attention of people from all walks of life. Following this, researchers have also conducted studies in many areas related to Chat-GPT in the literature. For this purpose, bibliometric data of different types of works scanned in the Web of Science database and published between 2020-2024 was taken as basis. When we look at the distribution of 416 works related to Chat GPT according to publication years, it is seen that the most were produced in 2024 (222 works), 2023 (186 works) and in other years (2 works). It is seen that there has been a concentration in the last two years; the authors who produced the most works are Jerome R. Lechien, Viroj Wiwanitkit, and Wisit Cheungpasitporn; The publication type is mainly journal article (286), paper (48), early appearance (45) and review article (30); When the top five research fields are examined, it is found that works are published in the fields of computer science (101), general medicine (50), educational research (32), and surgery (26); the leadership in the distribution of publications by country is with publishers from the USA (123), China (47), and India (33); works are published primarily in English (405), Spanish (6), and Portuguese (3); and publications scanned in SSCI (227), ESCI (115), and SSCI (45) indexes predominate. When the most frequently used keywords in publications related to Chat GPT are examined, the following are the leading expressions: “artificial intelligence” with 101 occurrences, “Chat gpt” with 90 occurrences, “large language models” with 43 occurrences, “chat gpt” with 42 occurrences, “ai” with 29 occurrences, “chat-gpt” with 27 occurrences, and “chatbot” with 17 occurrences.
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