“…Many psychiatric fields have been studied with the help of bibliometric methods, e.g. the relative size of the literature for diagnostic categories (Sprock and Herrmann, 2000), bipolar disorder (Clement, Singh and Burns, 2003;Lopez-Munoz, Vieta, Rubio et al, 2006), the use of DSM and ICD for classification (Lopez-Munoz, Garcia-Garcia, Saiz-Ruiz et al, 2008), the use of SSRIs for treatment of depression (Lopez-Munoz, Alamo, Rubio et al, 2003), studies of ADHD (Lopez-Munoz, Alamo, Quintero-Gutiérrez et al, 2008), eating disorders (Theander, 2002;Theander, 2004), and schizophrenia (Morlino, Lisanti, Gogliettino et al, 1997). Bibliometrics uses principally two methods, a) counting numbers of articles as quantitative measure (Price, 1951), or b) use of citation analysis in the search for the value or impact of a paper, a journal, or a research group (Garfield, 1955;Lundberg, 2006;Garfield, 2007;Koskinen, Isohanni, Paajala et al, 2008).…”