Showing 1 - 20 results of 676 for search '"Scholar"', query time: 0.08s Refine Results
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    Scholarly communication's mess : can economic analysis help? by Budd, John M.

    Published 2021
    “…This paper constitutes a trial of a game- and decision-theory based approach that is intended to examine elements of the complexities of scholarly communication as an economic endeavor. Both individual and institutional kinds of games are analyzed in order to determine what factors would affect the real economic use of game and decision theories. …”
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    Journal Article
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    Time-looping in scholarly publishing: an investigation of the FT50 journals by Moussa, Salim

    Published 2023
    “…Background. In scholarly publishing, time-looping is the practice of assigning papers that were online-published at a specific point in time to post-dated journal volumes/issues.…”
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    Journal Article
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    Sharing economy research: a research agenda for knowledge management scholars by Chua, Alton Yeow Kuan, Liew, Hattie

    Published 2023
    “…Findings: Based on the findings, research gaps and conceptualization issues relevant to KM scholars are discussed. Collaboration opportunities and methodological challenges are also identified. …”
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    Journal Article
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    Creating a dialogue : are scholars from Mars and policy makers from Venus? by Desker, Barry

    Published 2022
    “…In their stimulating article, ‘On Bridging the Gap: The Relevance of Theory to the Practice of Conflict Resolution’ (Australian Journal of International Affairs, 59:2 2005), Jacob Bercovitch, Kevin Clements and Daniel Druckman have addressed an important issue in the study of international relations—the perceived gap between scholars and policy makers—or to put it in another way (in by now well-known terms used in a different context): ‘scholars are from Mars and policy makers are from Venus’. …”
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    Journal Article
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    Who is mentioning COVID-19 articles on twitter? Classifying twitter users in the context of scholarly communication by Ye, Estella Yingxin, Na, Jin-Cheon

    Published 2024
    “…This study aims to examine the demographics of participants engaged in scholarly communication on Twitter, which has been rebranded as X. …”
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    Journal Article
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    Are automated accounts driving scholarly communication on Twitter? a case study of dissemination of COVID-19 publications by Ye, Estella Yingxin, Na, Jin-Cheon, Oh, Poong

    Published 2022
    “…From a network perspective, this study analyzes 659 users mentioning sampled COVID-19 articles 10 or more times on Twitter with a focus on their roles in facilitating the process of scholarly communication. Different from existing studies, we consider both the user types and the automation of accounts to profile influential users in the network of research dissemination. …”
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    Journal Article
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    Detecting collaboration patterns among iSchools by linking scholarly communication to social networking at the macro and micro levels by Yu, So-Young

    Published 2021
    “…At the macro level, comparison between the top interest in social networking and that of scholarly communication was performed by revealing top co-word networks. …”
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    Verbal agreement in Tangut: a conflicting opinion by Kwanten, L.

    Published 2024
    “…In a series of three articles published in this journal, the Russian scholar K.B.Keping advanced a theory of verbal agreement in Tangut (Hsi Hsia).1 In her theory, she states that both transitive and intransitive verbs agree with the subject and the object of the verbal action when they are expressed by a personal pronoun. …”
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    Charting a future for fMRI in communication science by Turner, Benjamin O., Huskey, Richard, Weber, René

    Published 2021
    “…Here, we look to the future of fMRI in communication science: first, highlighting and advocating for several relatively new methods that should enable communication scholars to address novel research questions; and second, pointing out various controversies or pitfalls that exist in the use of several of the more widely used fMRI analysis methods within the field. …”
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    Journal Article