Odell.indd 546 The Interdisciplinary Influence of Library and Information Science 1996–2004: A Journal-to-Journal Citation Analysis Jere Odell and Ralph Gabbard Jere Odell is Academic Literature Specialist at the Indiana University Center for Bioethics; e-mail: jdodell@iupui.edu; Ralph Gabbard is User Services Officer of Fletcher Library at Arizona State University at the West Campus; e-mail: Ralph.Gabbard@asu.edu. Using citation data from Journal Citation Reports (JCR) 1996–2004, this research replicates Meyer and Spencer’s analysis of other-field citations to Library and Information Science (LIS) journals from 1972 to 1994. After 1994, JCR added LIS journals emphasizing empirical, information science research and simultaneously dropped journals addressing the profession of librarianship. The newly added journals attract a broader interdisciplinary readership—a readership reflected in a 14 percent in- crease in other-field citations of the LIS journals. The LIS journals included in both this and the Meyer and Spencer research, a list dominated by titles frequently read and cited by others in the LIS discipline, have not received an equal increase in other-field citations. ibrary and Information Sci- ence (LIS) scholars, not un- like scholars in any academic discipline, generally write to their peers and are subsequently pub- lished and cited in journals addressing the research interests of their field. In recent years, articles published in Library and Information Science journals have annually received over 10,000 citations; not surprisingly, most of these citations originate in other LIS journals.1 A por- tion of these articles are also cited in journals associated with other academic disciplines and professional fields; how- ever, when compared with the journal literatures of other fields, LIS research a�racts a narrow interdisciplinary citing audience. In 1984, as Clement Y.K. So demonstrated, LIS journals were the least likely of all the Social Science disciplines to be cited by other fields.2 Although the leading Social Science fields (Psychiatry, Psychology, Economics, Business, and So- ciology) received over 25 percent, and the less “developed” fields (Anthropology, Education, Political Science, Languages, and Communication) received at least 15 percent, LIS journals received only 8 percent of their total citations from other disciplines.3 Thus, if citations are an indi- cation of an engaged reading audience, the broader academic community in 1984 had li�le interest in LIS research. A decade later, however, external in- terest in the library field increased. Terry The Interdisciplinary Influence of Library and Information Science 1996–2004 547 Meyer and John Spencer, in reviewing twenty-four leading LIS journals from 1972 to 1994, found that citations from oth- er disciplines had risen from 8 percent to 13 percent—1,931 of 14,378 total citations received.4 The fields most likely to cite LIS articles included Computer Science (con- tributing 15.5% of all non-LIS citations), Social Sciences (11.6%), Medicine (10.2%), and Psychology (9.9%).5 The authors also found that journals with an emphasis on quantitative and experimental research in the information sciences were the most likely to receive non-LIS citations. In fact, three of these journals (Sciento- metrics, Journal of the American Society for Information Science,6 and Journal of Docu- mentation) together received over one-half (1,059/1,931) of all the other-field citations to LIS journals.7 Furthermore, the first two of these titles claimed a disproportionate number of citations, 25.7% (496/1,931) and 21.2% (409/1,931) respectively, while ten of the twenty-four journals in the study received less than 1 percent of the non-LIS citations.8 If Scientometrics and Journal of the American Society for Information Science were excluded from Meyer and Spencer’s citation counts, other-field citations to LIS journals would drop from 13 to 9 percent of all citations received.9 Meyer and Spencer ’s citation study spanned a 22-year period in which information technologies transformed libraries and library science research.10 Today these technologies, and more re- cent innovations, have changed research practices in most academic fields; they have also become inseparable from the study of LIS and the provision of many library services. The growing importance of information science and technology to the discipline is likewise evident in the ever-evolving title list of the Journal Cita- tion Reports’ (JCR) “Information Science and Library Science” subject category. Since 1994, one-half of the titles that once ranked (by “Impact Factor”) in the top twenty-four titles in the subject category fell into the lower-ranked titles, ceased publication, changed editorial focus, or were dropped from JCR’s index.11 Many of the leading LIS journals slipped below, or were replaced by, titles newly intro- duced to the subject category. As journals addressing the practice and profession of library science were dropped from the JCR subject category, a portion of the category’s readers were likely also lost—an unknown number of librarians and library science researchers and edu- cators. On the other hand, these readers may have become more interested in an increasingly relevant information science and technology literature. Whatever precipitated this change in the subject category, many of the new titles (par- ticularly those with some of the highest impact factors) emphasized quantitative and experimental information science research, including: MIS Quarterly, Inter- national Journal of Geographical Information Science, Information Research, Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, and Information & Management. The literature of any discipline can be expected to change when innovations open a field to new research methods and subjects; how or if these technologies will change the field’s position within the academic community is less certain. If these innovations, directly or indirectly, are promoting an increase in quantitative research, and if (as Meyer and Spencer observed) these articles a�ract a wider reading and citing audience than do qualitative and interpretive articles, the norms and standards by which the disci- pline evaluates scholarship may change.12 These evolving research standards and methods may also increase the rate at which LIS articles are cited by other fields. If these factors, or others that contributed to a 6 percent increase in other-field cita- tions from 1984 to 1994, have continued to influence LIS scholarship in recent years, the discipline’s reputation for insularity and isolation may no longer be merited. Research Question Using data from Journal Citation Reports 1996–2004, the authors measure the de- 548 College & Research Libraries November 2008 veloping influence of LIS journal litera- ture by replicating Meyer and Spencer’s “A Citation Analysis Study of Library Science: Who Cites Librarians?”13 By up- dating Meyer and Spencer, this citation study quantifies the ratio of other-field citations to self-citations for the cited LIS subject category. The analysis also ranks journals within the discipline by other- field citations received and identifies the subject categories and journals that most frequently cite LIS articles. In tracking the intellectual export of the field’s scholar- ship, this research seeks to answer the question: what is the interdisciplinary impact of LIS scholarship? Literature Review Following the publication of Eugene Garfield’s Citation Indexes for Science and the subsequent introduction of the indexes for Sciences and Social Sciences, citation analysis, as shown by Anton J. Nederhof and also Thomas E. Nisonger, became a common quantitative measure of academic influence and productivity.14 Scholars have also used citation analysis to study the implied relationships among those who share, give, or receive citations. The study of these citation pa�erns aims to reveal how (as Garfield noted in “Ci- tation Indexing for Studying Science”) “each brick of the edifice of science is linked to all the others.”15 O�en with this goal in mind (as in research by Kevin W. Boyack, Richard Klavans, and Katy Börner; Bluma C. Peritz and Judit Bar- Ilan; Howard D. White and Katherine W. McCain; and others) scholars have em- ployed author co-citation, bibliographic coupling, journal-to-journal, and other methods of analysis to establish shared intellectual lineages, to map scholarly communication, and to delineate vari- ous knowledge domains and academic disciplines.16 Much of this research, as Stephen P. Harter, Thomas E. Nisonger, and Aiwei Weng remind us, extends from Robert K. Merton’s premise that a citation serves “a social, normative function.”17 Oth- ers, as Henry G. Small notes, were o�en directly inspired by Thomas S. Kuhn’s suggestion that the study of “references” could identify communities of scholars sharing a “disciplinary matrix” or “para- digm.”18 Toward this end, Chaomei Chen et al. and Eugene Garfield, A.I. Pudovkin, and V.S. Istomin (and others) have used citation analysis to document the devel- oping trends and shi�ing paradigms of science.19 Reviews of these efforts, even by advocates, generally agree with White and McCain that the more commonly used citation analysis methods may be too blunt to detect the subtle signs of a coming scientific revolution.20 These re- views, however, have reaffirmed the use of citation analysis methods to measure a paradigm shi� in its later stages or, as Small asserts, a�er the research has, in Kuhn’s terms, adjusted to the new “nor- mal science.”21 Citation studies examining the shi�- ing profile of LIS research have not only charted and mapped citation patterns within the discipline, as did Denise Kou- fogiannakis and Linda Slater, but have also provided, in Lokman I. Meho and Kristina M. Spurgin, and also in Christian Schloegl and Wolfgang G. Stock, com- parative assessments of the productivity, influence, and rigor of the field’s journal literature.22 The results that these and other assessments provide have not been encouraging. Robert Grover, Jack Glazier, and Maurice Tsai characterized the field’s research as underdeveloped; Jeffery N. Ga�en demonstrated the field’s isolation and high rate of self-citation; and Lynne McKechnie and Karen E. Pe�igrew found an absence of a rigorous theoretical and conceptual foundation.23 Reports such as these have prompted essays by John M. Budd, by Bill Crowley, and by Peter Hernon calling for intentional efforts to redefine the norms of quality research and to purposefully change the LIS paradigm.24 Although these manifestos for reform may themselves indicate a shi� in the The Interdisciplinary Influence of Library and Information Science 1996–2004 549 research paradigm already well under- way, revolutionary changes in the LIS field are more commonly a�ributed, as by Julian Warner and others, to the pace of technological innovation.2 5 While transforming the field of LIS, information technologies have also changed research and research methods across multiple academic disciplines. LIS, therefore, may now share more areas of common interest with other fields than in earlier decades. This observation is evident in the multiple JCR subject categories that currently include “Information Science and Library Science” journals.26 If these and newer shared interdisciplinary interests have continued to grow, and if the most influential articles are, as Meyer and Spencer observed, more of- ten published in journals emphasizing quantitative and experimental research, the norms of quality LIS research may shi� accordingly.27 If so, accompanying changes in the LIS citation profile (the map of what disciplines are reading and citing the field’s journal literature) will be observed. Thus, although a variety of citation analysis methods could be used to examine recent changes in LIS schol- arship, a study of citations from other fields best reveals the broader relevance of the research. Methodology The data for this citation study were acquired from Journal Citation Reports (1996–2004). Using JCR’s “Subject Cat- egory” tables, a list of “Information Sci- ence and Library Science” journals for each year of this study was established. The resulting “Information Science and Library Science” title list included sixty- seven journals. For each of these titles, JCR’s “Cited Journal” tables were used to build lists of citing journals. These lists were imported into a single spread- sheet with columns for the JCR year, the cited journal, the citing journal, and the number of citations granted. Thus, for example, Journal of Documentation in the year 2000 received a total of 417 citations from sixty-six citing journals. These citing journals included titles from the LIS discipline (such as Library Quar- terly—six citations) and from journals in other subject categories (such as Com- putational Intelligence in the “Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence” subject category—four citations). To identify the subject categories cit- ing LIS journals, the citing titles were compared with the subject category lists in JCR’s Science and Social Science editions. After identifying each citing journal’s subject category (or categories), these subjects were added as a column to the spreadsheet described above. Some citing journals were not included in JCR’s subject category lists and were excluded from the subject category citation totals. An additional number of citations to some of the LIS journals were identified as “ALL OTHERS” by JCR; these citations were also excluded from the subject category totals.28 From 1996 to 2004, JCR provided title lists for 256 subjects (Science, 194; Social Science, 62); 215 of these subjects cited LIS journals. To avoid inflated subject category totals, citations from journals listed in more than one subject category were adjusted by dividing the number of citations received by the number of sub- jects represented. Thus, in the year 2000, the LIS journal Scientometrics received three citations from Issues & Studies, a journal included in two subject category lists—“International Relations” and “Po- litical Science.” Therefore, these citations were recorded as l.5 citations from the first category and l.5 citations from the second category. To clarify the results, all 256 subjects were consolidated in thirty- eight “Research Areas”; for example, all subjects including the word “computer” were grouped under the heading “Com- puter Science & Technology.” A�er identifying citing journals and their subject categories, all citations from LIS journals (self-citations) were subtracted from the total citations to LIS titles. The remaining citations, all from 550 College & Research Libraries November 2008 other fields, were sorted and subtotaled by subject category, cited journal, citing journal and citing year.29 These citation totals are reported in table 1 with each journal’s other-field citations to self-cita- tions ratio and with each journal’s portion of all the other-field citations received by LIS journals. Finally, using the same citation data (JCR 1996–2004), a second set of citation totals and subtotals were established for only the twenty-two LIS titles both included in Meyer and Spencer’s study and indexed by JCR a�er 1995. Two of the twenty-four titles from this earlier research were not indexed by JCR during the nine years represented in this study. The remaining twenty-two titles were indexed by JCR for all or some of the years (see table 1). By excluding the newer (and o�en highly cited) LIS journals, this replicated title list isolates the interdisci- plinary interest in the field’s traditional, mainstream journal literature. The cita- tion counts for the replicated title list are reported side-by-side with the Meyer and Spenser findings in table 5. Results The sixty-seven journals listed in JCR subject category Information Science & Library Science received 109,775 citations from 1996 to 2004. Of these total citations, 29,622 (27.0%) were from journals listed in other JCR subject categories; 58,318 were from the LIS subject category, 12,326 were listed as “ALL OTHERS,” and 9,509 were generated by titles not included in JCR’s subject lists (see figure 1). During these years, with a cumulative other-field to self- citations ratio of 0.5 (29,622/58,318), the other-field citations ratio increased from 0.2 (1,180/5,066) in 1996 to 0.7 (6,249/8,412) in 2004. The percentage of the total cita- tions to LIS journals granted by non-LIS journals also increased—beginning at 17.7 percent (1,180/6,657) in 1996 and rising to 34.7 percent (6,249/18,025) in 2004. Of the LIS titles tracked by JCR from 1996 to 2004, thirteen were more o�en cited by journals in other categories than by LIS journals; the five journals with the greatest ratio of other-field citations to subject category self-citations were: Knowledge Acquisition, 19.6 (157/8);30 Social FIGURE 1 Citations to LIS Journals 1996–2004 LIS Self Cites, 58,318, 53% Cites from Journals Without Identified Subject Categories, 9,509, 9% Cites Listed as "ALL OTHERS" by JCR, 12,326, 11% Other-Field Cites to LIS, 29,622, 27% Other-Field Cites to LIS LIS Self Cites Cites from Journals Without Identified Subject Categories Cites Listed as "ALL OTHERS" by JCR The Interdisciplinary Influence of Library and Information Science 1996–2004 551 TA B L E 1 C it ed L IS J ou rn al s, 1 99 6- 20 04 Jo ur na l T it le Y ea rs In de xe d JC R O F * C it es Se lf C it es A ll O th er s U na ss ig ne d C at eg or ie s To ta l C it es O F / S el f C it es % o f A ll O F C it es to L IS Jo ur na ls M IS Q ua rt er ly 19 97 -2 00 4 6, 38 9 4, 16 0 51 9 88 0 11 ,9 48 1. 5 21 .6 Jo ur na l o f t he A m er ic an M ed ic al In fo rm at ic s A ss oc ia tio n 19 97 -2 00 4 3, 86 2 2, 09 2 87 9 73 4 7, 56 7 1. 9 13 .0 In te rn at io na l J ou rn al o f G eo gr ap hi ca l I nf or m at io n Sc ie nc e 19 97 -2 00 4 2, 72 0 80 4 62 2 38 1 4, 52 7 3. 4 9. 2 In fo rm at io n & M an ag em en t 19 97 -2 00 4 2, 38 3 2, 01 4 55 4 41 6 5, 36 7 1. 2 8. 0 Jo ur na l o f t he A m er ic an S oc ie ty fo r I nf or m at io n Sc ie nc e an d Te ch no lo gy 19 97 -2 00 4 2, 14 3 8, 51 0 82 1 1, 60 2 13 ,0 76 0. 3 7. 2 In fo rm at io n Pr oc es si ng & M an ag em en t 19 97 -2 00 4 1, 49 8 2, 93 1 58 4 78 1 5, 79 4 0. 5 5. 1 In fo rm at io n Sy st em s R es ea rc h 19 97 -2 00 4 1, 09 8 99 6 34 7 21 5 2, 65 6 1. 1 3. 7 Sc ie nt om et ri cs 19 97 -2 00 4 1, 07 7 4, 44 1 37 7 44 4 6, 33 9 0. 2 3. 6 So ci al S ci en ce In fo rm at io n 19 97 -2 00 4 63 0 17 6 94 4 79 1, 82 9 3. 6 2. 1 Te le co m m un ic at io n Po lic y 19 97 -2 00 4 61 0 84 2 35 2 11 8 1, 92 2 0. 7 2. 1 Jo ur na l o f M an ag em en t I nf or m at io n Sy st em s 19 97 -2 00 4 60 3 47 7 11 7 79 1, 27 6 1. 3 2. 0 In te rn at io na l J ou rn al o f I nf or m at io n M an ag em en t 19 97 -2 00 4 59 6 48 5 35 8 81 15 20 1. 2 2. 0 Sc ie nt is t 19 97 -2 00 4 56 5 1, 98 7 76 3 55 3, 37 0 0. 3 1. 9 Jo ur na l o f t he M ed ic al L ib ra ry A ss oc ia tio n 19 97 -2 00 4 56 3 1, 33 6 39 3 13 5 3, 02 7 0. 3 1. 9 Jo ur na l o f I nf or m at io n Te ch no lo gy 19 97 -2 00 4 49 1 31 4 25 7 78 1, 14 0 1. 6 1. 7 Jo ur na l o f D oc um en ta tio n 19 97 -2 00 4 45 6 3, 55 4 37 0 39 6 4, 77 6 0. 1 1. 5 Jo ur na l o f H ea lth C om m un ic at io n 19 97 -2 00 4 36 3 10 8 20 8 17 69 6 3. 4 1. 2 552 College & Research Libraries November 2008 TA B L E 1 C it ed L IS J ou rn al s, 1 99 6- 20 04 Jo ur na l T it le Y ea rs In de xe d JC R O F * C it es Se lf C it es A ll O th er s U na ss ig ne d C at eg or ie s To ta l C it es O F / S el f C it es % o f A ll O F C it es to L IS Jo ur na ls So ci al S ci en ce C om pu te r R ev ie w 19 97 -2 00 4 31 8 18 5 29 2 35 83 0 1. 7 1. 1 In fo rm at io n So ci et y 19 97 -2 00 4 27 1 35 3 31 6 10 0 1, 04 0 0. 8 0. 9 In fo rm at io n Sy st em s Jo ur na l 19 97 -2 00 4 24 9 38 5 11 3 78 82 5 0. 6 0. 8 R es ta ur at or -I nt er na tio na l J ou rn al fo r t he P re se rv at io n of L ib ra ry a nd A rc hi va l M at er ia l 19 97 -2 00 4 22 1 46 0 12 49 74 2 0. 5 0. 7 Jo ur na l o f I nf or m at io n Sc ie nc e 19 97 -2 00 4 17 0 1, 52 2 42 6 16 6 2, 28 4 0. 1 0. 6 L aw L ib ra ry J ou rn al 19 97 -2 00 4 16 2 59 8 18 21 79 9 0. 3 0. 5 K no w le dg e A cq ui si tio n 19 96 15 7 8 36 72 27 3 19 .6 0. 5 Pr og ra m -E le ct ro ni c L ib ra ry a nd In fo rm at io n Sy st em s 19 96 -2 00 4 14 5 33 2 12 9 11 1 71 7 0. 4 0. 5 A nn ua l R ev ie w o f I nf or m at io n Sc ie nc e an d Te ch no lo gy 19 96 -9 9, 20 01 -0 4 12 5 1, 20 8 18 3 10 9 1, 62 5 0. 1 0. 4 O nl in e 19 96 -2 00 4 11 1 73 8 23 9 90 1, 17 8 0. 2 0. 4 E co nt en t 19 96 -2 00 4 11 0 57 5 11 3 68 86 6 0. 2 0. 4 In fo rm at io n Te ch no lo gy a nd L ib ra ri es 19 96 -2 00 4 95 40 2 68 41 60 6 0. 2 0. 3 E le ct ro ni c L ib ra ry 19 96 -2 00 4 84 32 6 61 42 51 3 0. 3 0. 3 G ov er nm en t I nf or m at io n Q ua rt er ly 19 96 -2 00 4 75 36 4 23 27 48 9 0. 2 0. 3 Jo ur na l o f I nf or m at io n E th ic s 19 97 -2 00 4 75 15 9 41 20 29 5 0. 5 0. 3 B eh av io ra l & S oc ia l S ci en ce s L ib ra ri an 19 96 -2 00 0 72 20 6 54 11 34 3 0. 3 0. 2 L ib ra ry J ou rn al 19 96 -2 00 4 71 1, 67 5 31 3 29 2 2, 35 1 0 0. 2 C an ad ia n Jo ur na l o f I nf or m at io n an d L ib ra ry S ci en ce 19 96 -2 00 4 70 18 7 25 19 30 1 0. 4 0. 2 The Interdisciplinary Influence of Library and Information Science 1996–2004 553 TA B L E 1 C it ed L IS J ou rn al s, 1 99 6- 20 04 Jo ur na l T it le Y ea rs In de xe d JC R O F * C it es Se lf C it es A ll O th er s U na ss ig ne d C at eg or ie s To ta l C it es O F / S el f C it es % o f A ll O F C it es to L IS Jo ur na ls K no w le dg e O rg an iz at io n 19 96 -2 00 4 69 19 9 6 27 30 1 0. 3 0. 2 Jo ur na l o f L ib ra ri an sh ip a nd In fo rm at io n Sc ie nc e 19 96 -2 00 4 67 32 5 38 24 45 4 0. 2 0. 2 Jo ur na l o f A ca de m ic L ib ra ri an sh ip 19 96 -2 00 4 66 1, 30 4 18 2 19 0 1, 74 2 0. 1 0. 2 L ib ra ry & In fo rm at io n Sc ie nc e R es ea rc h 19 96 -2 00 4 65 94 6 13 0 70 1, 21 1 0. 1 0. 2 In te rn et W or ld 19 97 -9 8, 2 00 0 63 32 11 3 10 21 8 2 0. 2 L ib ra ry T re nd s 19 96 -2 00 4 63 1, 38 9 17 2 21 5 1, 83 9 0 0. 2 A sl ib P ro ce ed in gs 19 96 -2 00 4 62 56 5 10 6 46 77 9 0. 1 0. 2 O nl in e In fo rm at io n R ev ie w 19 96 -2 00 4 57 29 4 29 38 41 8 0. 2 0. 2 R es ea rc h E va lu at io n 20 02 -0 4 54 91 4 10 15 9 0. 6 0. 2 In te rl en di ng & D oc um en t S up pl y 19 96 -2 00 4 50 29 8 17 18 38 3 0. 2 0. 2 Jo ur na l o f S ch ol ar ly P ub lis hi ng 19 96 -2 00 4 44 97 22 38 20 1 0. 5 0. 1 Jo ur na l o f G ov er nm en t I nf or m at io n 19 96 -2 00 4 43 23 6 14 29 32 2 0. 2 0. 1 C ol le ge & R es ea rc h L ib ra ri es 19 96 -2 00 4 41 2, 47 1 13 5 37 5 3, 02 2 0 0. 1 L ib ri 19 96 -2 00 4 35 40 4 34 66 53 9 0. 1 0. 1 L ib ra ry Q ua rt er ly 19 96 -2 00 4 33 1, 20 2 14 4 14 6 1, 52 5 0 0. 1 Jo ur na l o f E du ca tio n fo r l ib ra ry a nd In fo rm at io n Sc ie nc e 19 96 -9 7, 9 9 30 32 8 36 7 40 1 0. 1 0. 1 L ib ra ry a nd In fo rm at io n Sc ie nc e 19 96 , 1 99 9- 20 00 22 25 7 10 23 31 2 0. 1 0. 1 L ib ra ry R es ou rc es & T ec hn ic al S er vi ce s 19 96 -2 00 4 22 60 6 22 91 74 1 0 0. 1 554 College & Research Libraries November 2008 TA B L E 1 C it ed L IS J ou rn al s, 1 99 6- 20 04 Jo ur na l T it le Y ea rs In de xe d JC R O F * C it es Se lf C it es A ll O th er s U na ss ig ne d C at eg or ie s To ta l C it es O F / S el f C it es % o f A ll O F C it es to L IS Jo ur na ls L ib ra ry C ol le ct io ns A cq ui si tio ns & T ec hn ic al S er vi ce s 19 96 -2 00 4 20 28 9 17 58 38 4 0. 1 0. 1 Pr oc ee di ng s of th e A SI S A nn ua l M ee tin g 19 96 -9 9, 20 01 -0 3 18 20 9 12 7 24 6 0. 1 0. 1 R ef er en ce & U se r S er vi ce s Q ua rt er ly 19 96 -2 00 4 18 63 8 43 85 78 4 0 0. 1 In fo rm at io n R es ea rc h- A n In te rn at io na l E le ct ro ni c Jo ur na l 20 04 14 76 7 7 10 4 0. 2 0 In te rn at io na l F or um o n In fo rm at io n an d D oc um en ta tio n 19 96 -9 9 10 59 10 5 84 0. 2 0 N FD In fo rm at io n – W is se ns ch af t U nd P ra xi s 19 96 -2 00 3 8 38 12 12 70 0. 2 0 L ib ra ry H ig h Te ch 19 96 -9 8 7 12 3 23 3 15 6 0. 1 0 Z ei ts ch ri ft F ur B ib lio th ek sw es en U nd B ib lio gr ap hi e 19 96 -2 00 4 6 88 5 16 11 5 0. 1 0 Sp ec ia l L ib ra ri es 19 96 -9 8 3 11 8 18 20 15 9 0 0 po rt al - L ib ra ri es a nd th e A ca de m y 20 04 2 54 0 10 66 0 0 W ils on L ib ra ry B ul le tin 19 96 -9 7 2 58 28 4 92 0 0 A m er ic an A rc hi vi st 19 96 0 4 7 17 28 0 0 C D -R O M P ro fe ss io na l 19 96 0 8 2 0 10 0 0 In te rn at io na l I nf or m at io n & L ib ra ry R ev ie w 19 96 0 2 1 0 3 0 0 To ta ls : 29 ,6 22 58 ,3 18 12 ,3 26 9, 50 9 10 9, 77 5 0. 5 10 0 * O F = O th er F ie ld The Interdisciplinary Influence of Library and Information Science 1996–2004 555 TABLE 2 Citing Journals Responsible for 50% (14,711/29,622) of All Other-Field Cites to LIS Citing Journal Total Cites % of All OF* Cites to LIS Journals Lecture Notes in Computer Science 1,098 3.7 Journal of Computer Information Systems 880 3.0 Decision Support Systems 818 2.8 European Journal of Information Systems 793 2.7 International Journals of Medical Informatics 710 2.4 Journal of Strategic Information Systems 623 2.1 Decision Science 567 1.9 Methods of Information in medicine 523 1.8 Omega-International Journal of Management Science 439 1.5 International Journal of Human-Computer Studies 428 1.4 IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management 424 1.4 Internet Research-Electronic Networking Applications and Policy 399 1.3 Behaviour & Information Technology 338 1.1 Industrial Management & Data Systems 330 1.1 Journal of Biomedical Informatics 329 1.1 ACM Transactions on Information Systems 318 1.1 International Journal of Electronic Commerce 292 1.0 Research Policy 275 0.9 Group Decision and Negotiation 261 0.9 Communications of the ACM 250 0.8 Journal of Systems and Software 248 0.8 Wirtschaftsinformatik 241 0.8 Computers in Human Behavior 231 0.8 Expert Systems with Applications 223 0.8 Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing 223 0.8 Journal of Organizational Computing and Electronic Commerce 220 0.7 Information and Software Technology 203 0.7 European Journal of Information Systems 195 0.7 Interacting with Computers 172 0.6 Environment and Planning B-Planning & Design 169 0.6 JAMA-Journal of the American Medical Association 159 0.5 International Journal of Technology Management 156 0.5 Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence 156 0.5 556 College & Research Libraries November 2008 Science Information, 3.6 (630/176); Interna- tional Journal of Geographical Information Science, 3.4 (2,720/804); Journal of Health Communication, 3.4 (363/108); and Internet World, 2.0 (63/32).31 More than one-half (51.8%) of all the other-field citations to LIS titles were granted to only four jour- nals: MIS Quarterly, 21.6% (6,389/29,622); Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 13.0% (3,862/29,622); Interna- tional Journal of Geographical Information Science, 9.2% (2,720/29,622); and Informa- tion & Management, 8.0% (2,383/29,622). An additional seven journals (Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 7.2%; Information Processing & Management, 5.1%; Information Systems Research, 3.7%; Scientometrics, 3.6%; Social Science Information, 2.1%; Telecommunica- tions Policy, 2.1%; and Journal of Manage- ment Information Systems, 2.0%) earned the next quarter of the discipline’s other-field citations. As shown in table 1, the remain- ing fi�y-six journals, with forty-nine of these titles each acquiring less than one percent of the total, split the final quarter of the discipline’s other-field citations.32 The disciplines citing LIS journals in these years are represented by 1,903 journals from other fields. Nearly one-half (49.7%, 14,711/29,622) of the other-field citations were generated by only fi�y- one of these titles. The first twelve titles contributed over one-quarter (26.0%, TABLE 2 Citing Journals Responsible for 50% (14,711/29,622) of All Other-Field Cites to LIS Citing Journal Total Cites % of All OF* Cites to LIS Journals Artificial Intelligence in Medicine 147 0.5 Management Science Series A-Theory 143 0.5 Organization Science 141 0.5 British Medical Journal 140 0.5 Journal of Chemical Information and Computer Sciences 125 0.4 IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering 123 0.4 International Journal of Operations & Production Management 117 0.4 Information Retrieval 115 0.4 Information Systems Management 115 0.4 International Journal of Remote Sensing 106 0.4 Journal of the Operational Research Society 102 0.3 Annals of Internal Medicine 99 0.3 Technovation 95 0.3 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States 93 0.3 Computers & Education 91 0.3 Geographical Analysis 90 0.3 M D Computing 90 0.3 Annals of the Association of American Geographers 88 0.3 *OF = Other-Field The Interdisciplinary Influence of Library and Information Science 1996–2004 557 7,702/29,622) of the citations (refer to table 2); eight journals cited the LIS category more than 500 times: Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 3.7% (1,098); Journal of Computer Information Systems, 3.0% (880); Decision Support Systems, 2.8% (818); European Journal of Information Systems, 2.7% (793); International Journal of Medical Informatics, 2.4% (710); Journal of Strategic Information Systems, 2.1% (623); Decision Sciences, 1.9% (567); and Methods of Infor- mation in Medicine, 1.8% (523). Citations to LIS journals were likewise distributed across 215 of the distinct JCR subject categories. From 1996 to 2004, nine of these subjects provided over one-half (50.8%, 15,035.9/29,622.0) of the citations to LIS journals (refer to table 3): “Computer Science, Informa- tion Systems,” 16.1% (4,765.3/29,622.0); “Management,” 8.0% (2,368.3/29,622.0); “Computer Science, Theory & Meth- ods,” 5.6% (1,644.1/29,622.0); “Com- puter Science, Artificial Intelligence,” TABLE 3 JCR Subject Categories Citing LIS Journals 1996-2004 Subject Categories Responsible for 1% or More of All OF* Cites to LIS Cites to LIS Mean Number of Journals Published Per Year % of All OF* Cites to LIS Computer Science, Information Systems 4,765.3 66.1 16.1 Management 2,368.3 67.0 8.0 Computer Science, Theory & Methods 1,644.1 64.4 5.6 Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence 1,278.3 66.1 4.3 Operations Research & Management Science 1,149.3 48.8 3.9 Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications 1,132.7 72.8 3.8 Medicine, General & Internal 1,001.9 104.9 3.4 Business 859.6 55.0 2.9 Medical Informatics 836.4 18.4 2.8 Computer Science, Software Engineering 765.3 70.3 2.6 Health Care Sciences & Services 563.3 39.9 1.9 Communications 526.0 40.0 1.8 Engineering, Industrial 521.9 29.4 1.8 Computer Science, Cybernetics 510.2 17.4 1.5 Geography 447.9 32.4 1.5 Education and Educational Research 435.3 96.7 1.5 Multidisciplinary Sciences 403.7 50.9 1.4 Ergonomics 392.2 23.2 1.3 Psychology, Multidisciplinary 353.8 102.7 1.2 Social Sciences, interdisciplinary 318.4 57.8 1.1 Engineering, Electrical & Electronic 316.5 200.3 1.1 Environmental Studies 301.1 45.1 1.0 *OF = Other-Field 558 College & Research Libraries November 2008 TABLE 4 Research Areas Citing LIS Journals 1996 – 2004 Research Areas Cites to LIS Mean Number of Journals Published Per Year Percentage of all Other-Field Cites to LIS Computer Science and Technology 10,337.1 404.4 34.9% Business and Management 4,434.8 204.4 15.0% Medicine 2,783.3 1,702.6 9.4% Engineering 1,362.8 677.2 4.6% Psychology, Neurology, and Behavioral Sciences 1,229.1 911.9 4.1% Medical Technologies 997.1 124.8 3.4% Ecological and Environmental Studies 741.6 275.0 2.5% Public and Social Services 626.4 284.7 2.1% Geography 620.7 53.7 2.1% Automation, Imaging and Acoustics 613.6 216.8 2.1% Communications 526.0 40.0 1.8% Education 524.0 119.2 1.8% Social Science Studies, Interdisciplinary 439.2 142.8 1.5% Political Science and International Studies 410.0 190.3 1.4% Multidisciplinary Sciences 403.7 50.9 1.4% Ergonomics 392.2 15.0 1.3% Biosciences 381.6 1,075.3 1.3% Geosciences 336.5 283.8 1.1% Economics 255.1 162.9 0.9% Chemistry 250.9 413.0 0.8% Law 242.9 106.6 0.8% Sociology 242.5 92.4 0.8% Agriculture and Food Sciences 240.3 351.0 0.8% Nursing 178.5 52.6 0.6% Natural Resources 155.4 92.0 0.5% Social Issues 149.4 87.3 0.5% Math 115.6 281.7 0.4% History 115.0 70.4 0.4% Social Science Methods 90.8 89.9 0.3% Zoological Sciences 81.8 251.8 0.3% Anthropology 78.0 49.6 0.3% Materials Science 75.4 281.9 0.3% The Interdisciplinary Influence of Library and Information Science 1996–2004 559 4.3% (1,278.3/29,622.0); “Operations Research & Management Science,” 3.9% (1,149.3/29,622.0); “Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Application,” 3.8% (1,132.7/29,622.0); “Medicine, General & Internal,” 3.4% (1,001.9/29,622.0); “Busi- ness,” 2.9% (859.6/29,622.0); and “Medical Informatics,” 2.8% (836.4/29,622.0). Similar results were observed after consolidating JCR’s 256 subject catego- ries into thirty-eight Social Science and Science “Research Areas”; journals in the “Information Science and Library Science” subject category drew citations from computer, management, and medi- cal fields. Citations from these Research Areas were also unevenly distributed. Less than one-half (seventeen) of the thirty-eight subject areas contributed over 90 percent (90.6%, 26,823.2/29,622.0) of the other-field citations (refer to table 4). Nearly one-half of the citations were TABLE 4 Research Areas Citing LIS Journals 1996 – 2004 Research Areas Cites to LIS Mean Number of Journals Published Per Year Percentage of all Other-Field Cites to LIS Applied Linguistics 69.3 39.9 0.2% Physics, Nuclear Science and Technology 62.5 326.8 0.2% Mining, Metallurgy and Fuels 18.3 108.5 0.1% Sport Sciences 16.8 60.3 0.1% Demography 16.5 16.8 0.1% Philosophy 7.5 20.3 0.0% Totals: 29,622.0 FIGURE 2 Research Areas Citing LIS More than Once per Mean Number of Annually Published Journals, 1996–2004 1.0 1.2 1.3 1.6 1.6 1.6 1.6 1.7 1.7 1.7 2.0 2.2 2.2 2.3 2.6 2.7 2.8 3.1 3.4 4.4 7.9 8.0 11.6 13.2 21.7 25.6 26.1 0.0 5.0 10.0 15.0 20.0 25.0 30.0 Social Science Methods (90.8/89.9) Geosciences (336.5/283.8) Psychology, Neurology, and Behavioral Sciences (1,229.1/911.9) Economics (255.1/162.9) Anthropology (78.0/49.6) History (115.0/70.4) Medicine (2,783.3/1,702.6) Natural Resources (155.4/92.0) Social Issues (149.4/87.3) Applied Linguistics (69.3/39.9) Engineering (1,362.7/677.2) Political Science and International Studies (410.0/190.3) Public and Social Services (626.4/284.7) Law (242.9/106.6) Sociology (242.5/92.4) Ecological and Environmental Studies (741.6/275.0) Automation, Imaging & Acoustics (613.6/216.8) Social Science Studies, Interdisciplinary (439.2/142.8) Nursing (178.5/52.6) Education (524.0/119.2) Multidisciplinary Sciences (403.7/50.9) Medical Technologies (997.1/124.8) Geography (620.7/53.7) Communications (526.0/40.0) Business & Management (4,434.7/204.4) Computer Science and Technology (10,337.1/404.4) Ergonomics (392.2/15.0) (continued) 560 College & Research Libraries November 2008 granted by only two research areas: Computer Science & Technology, 34.9% (10,337.1/29,622.0) and Business & Man- agement, 15.0% (4,434.8/29,622.0). Additional fields can be identified as heavy importers of LIS research after adjusting the field’s citations to the mean, annual number of journals published in each research area. As shown in figure 2, seventeen fields cited the LIS subject cat- egory two or more times per journal title. The five research areas with the most cita- tions to LIS per published journal include: Ergonomics, 26.1; Computer Science & Technology, 25.6; Business & Manage- ment, 21.7; Communications, 13.2; and Geography, 11.6. Comparatively, some large fields with high totals for citations to LIS journals were not heavy importers of LIS research—notably, Medicine (1,702.6 journals) and Psychology (911.9 journals), which contributed 9.4% and 4.1% of all other-field citations to LIS, but cited the subject category only 1.6 and 1.4 times per published Medicine and Psychology journal. Discussion When compared with Meyer and Spencer, these results show that the fields most likely to cite LIS literature from 1972 to 1994 have continued to cite LIS journals more than most disciplines do. Two sub- jects, however, have doubled their shared portion of citations to LIS literature: Com- puter Sciences (from 15.5% to 34.9%) and Business & Management (from 8.0% to 15.0%).33 Medicine (9.4%) has continued to provide close to one-tenth of all other- field citations, and Psychology (4.1%) and Engineering (4.6%) also continue to provide LIS journals more citations than most Science and Social Science fields. Ergonomics, when adjusted for the field’s size (with an average of only fi�een journals published annually) was also a leading citer in both studies, with 4.6% (1972–1994) and 1.3% (1996–2004) of the other-field citations to LIS. Likewise, although the number of LIS titles shar- ing just over 50 percent of the other-field citations has increased from three (Scien- tometrics, 25.7% [496/1,931]; Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 21.2% [409/1,931]; and Journal of Documentation, 8.2% [159/1,931])34 to four (MIS Quarterly, 21.6%; Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 13.5%; International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 9.9%; and Information & Management, 8.7%—see table 1), the disproportionate distribution of cita- tions among the LIS journals remains. Although Scientometrics (3.6%) and Journal of the American Society for Information Sci- ence and Technology (7.3%) continue to be two of the more o�en cited journals in the discipline, journals that were not included in the Meyer and Spencer study now command the majority of the other-field citations. Three-fourths (22,321/29,622) of the other-field citations LIS journals received from 1996 to 2004 were to jour- nals not listed in JCR’s 1992 “Information Science and Library Science” category and were, therefore, absent from Meyer and Spencer’s title list. These new LIS titles included all four of the journals that re- ceived over one-half (53.7%) of other-field citations from 1996 to 2004. Although the other-field citations to LIS journals have increased from 8 percent of all citations in 1984, to 13 percent in 1994,35 and to 27 percent in 2004,36 this rise in cita- tions cannot be a�ributed to the journals used in Meyer and Spencer’s analysis. If the citation counts from this study were re- stricted to the twenty-two titles (see table 5), both included in Meyer and Spencer and indexed by JCR a�er 1995, other-field citations to LIS journals would drop from 27.0 percent (29,622/109,775) of the total citations to 13.7 percent (7,511/54,665). Similarly, if limited to the Meyer and Spencer title list, the ratio of other-field citations to self-citations from 1996 to 2004 would fall from 0.51 (29,622/109,775) to 0.21 (7,511/36,677). Although the ratio of other-field citations to self-citations has improved since Meyer and Spencer established the mark at 0.16 (1,904/12,092), when newer titles are excluded, the per- The Interdisciplinary Influence of Library and Information Science 1996–2004 561 TA B L E 5 M ey er & S pe nc er T it le s 19 71 -1 99 4 an d 19 96 -2 00 4 Jo ur na l O F C it es 19 72 - 19 94 Se lf C it es 19 72 - 19 94 O F C it es / Se lf C it es 19 72 -1 99 4 % o f a ll O F C it es 19 72 -1 99 4 O F C it es 19 96 - 20 04 Se lf C it es 19 96 - 20 04 O F C it es / Se lf C it es 19 96 -2 00 4 % o f a ll O F C it es to M ey er & S pe nc er ti tl es 19 96 -2 00 4 A nn ua l R ev ie w o f I nf or m at io n Sc ie nc e 28 22 5 .1 2 1. 5 12 5 1, 20 8 .1 0 1. 66 B ri tis h M ed ic al L ib ra ry A ss oc ia tio n (n ow J ou rn al o f t he M ed ic al L ib ra ry A ss oc ia tio n) 89 55 4 .1 6 4. 7 56 3 1, 93 6 .2 9 7. 5 C ol le ge & R es ea rc h L ib ra ri es 45 98 9 .0 5 2. 4 41 2, 47 1 .0 2 0. 55 D at ab as e (n ow E co nt en t) 10 5 66 2 .1 6 5. 5 11 0 57 5 .1 9 1. 46 In fo rm at io n Pr oc es si ng & M an ag em en t 14 2 62 1 .2 3 7. 5 1, 49 8 2, 93 1 .5 1 19 .9 4 In fo rm at io n Te ch no lo gy a nd L ib ra ri es 14 23 8 .0 6 0. 7 95 40 2 .2 4 1. 26 In te rl en di ng & D oc um en t S up pl y 7 58 .1 2 0. 4 50 29 8 .1 7 0. 67 Jo ur na l o f A ca de m ic L ib ra ri an sh ip 22 57 0 .0 4 1. 2 66 1, 30 4 .0 5 0. 88 Jo ur na l o f t he A m er ic an S oc ie ty fo r I nf or m at io n Sc ie nc e an d Te ch no lo gy 40 9 1, 47 3 .2 8 21 .5 2, 14 3 8, 51 0 .2 5 28 .5 3 Jo ur na l o f D oc um en ta tio n 15 9 97 4 .1 6 8. 4 45 6 3, 55 4 .1 3 6. 07 Jo ur na l o f I nf or m at io n Sc ie nc e 10 4 56 2 .1 9 5. 5 17 0 1, 52 2 .1 1 2. 26 L ib ra ry A cq ui si tio ns P ra ct ic e an d T he or y (n ow L ib ra ry C ol le ct io ns A cq ui si tio ns a nd T ec hn ic al S er vi ce s) 1 10 9 .0 1 0. 1 20 28 9 .0 7 0. 27 L ib ra ry a nd In fo rm at io n Sc ie nc e 1 7 .1 4 0. 1 22 25 7 .0 9 0. 29 L ib ra ry & In fo rm at io n Sc ie nc e R es ea rc h 18 23 0 .0 8 0. 9 65 94 6 .0 7 0. 87 L ib ra ry J ou rn al 59 1, 24 5 .0 5 3. 1 71 1, 67 5 .0 4 0. 95 L ib ra ry Q ua rt er ly 16 20 7 .0 8 0. 8 33 1, 20 2 .0 3 0. 44 562 College & Research Libraries November 2008 centage of all citations that origi- nate in other fields has remained virtually unchanged—from 13.4 percent (1,931/14,378)37 for Meyer and Spencer’s twenty-four titles during the years of 1972 to 1994 and to 13.7 percent (7,511/54,665) for the twenty-two shared titles during the years of this study, 1996 to 2004. If the influence of LIS scholar- ship is increasing, the change cannot be a�ributed to citations received by the twenty-two jour- nals of the Meyer and Spencer study—a list dominated by titles frequently read and cited by authors from the profession of librarianship: College & Research Libraries, Journal of Academic Li- brarianship, Library Quarterly, and others. These changes, rather, can be a�ributed to newer titles in the subject category—journals plac- ing less emphasis on librarianship and more emphasis on informa- tion technology and informa- tion science research. The rising influence of information science journals within the LIS field (as defined by Journal Citation Re- ports) can be roughly observed by contrasting Meyer and Spencer’s title list, the twenty-four LIS titles with the greatest JCR “Im- pact Factor” in 1992 to the same “Impact Factor” rankings for the subject category in 2002. In 1992, thirteen of the twenty-four high- est ranked LIS journals included some form of the word “library” in their titles; ten years later, that number receded to six. Limitations and Further Research The results reported here are con- fined to Journal Citation Reports’ title list for the subject category “Information Science and Library Science.” JCR may include titles TA B L E 5 M ey er & S pe nc er T it le s 19 71 -1 99 4 an d 19 96 -2 00 4 Jo ur na l O F C it es 19 72 - 19 94 Se lf C it es 19 72 - 19 94 O F C it es / Se lf C it es 19 72 -1 99 4 % o f a ll O F C it es 19 72 -1 99 4 O F C it es 19 96 - 20 04 Se lf C it es 19 96 - 20 04 O F C it es / Se lf C it es 19 96 -2 00 4 % o f a ll O F C it es to M ey er & S pe nc er ti tl es 19 96 -2 00 4 L ib ra ry R es ou rc es & T ec hn ic al S er vi ce s 1 25 3 .0 0 0. 1 22 60 6 .0 4 0. 29 O nl in e 91 1, 11 0 .0 8 4. 8 11 1 73 8 .1 5 1. 48 Pr og ra m -E le ct ro ni c L ib ra ry a nd In fo rm at io n Sy st em s 4 11 8 .0 3 0. 2 14 5 33 2 .4 4 1. 93 R ef er en ce Q ua rt er ly (n ow R ef er en ce & U se r S er vi ce s Q ua rt er ly ) 33 1, 04 7 .0 3 1. 7 18 63 8 .0 3 0. 24 Sc ie nt om et ri cs 49 6 76 0 .6 5 26 .1 1, 07 7 4, 44 1 .2 4 14 .3 4 Te le co m m un ic at io n Po lic y 60 80 .7 5 3. 2 61 0 84 2 .7 2 8. 12 To ta ls : 1, 90 4 12 ,0 92 .1 6 7, 51 1 36 ,6 77 .2 0 O F = O th er F ie ld (c on tin ue d) The Interdisciplinary Influence of Library and Information Science 1996–2004 563 in this list that many LIS scholars would exclude. Likewise, JCR does not index other LIS titles—for example, in 2004 the JCR titles relevant to the LIS field but not indexed by JCR included: Science & Tech- nology Libraries, International Information and Library Review, The Serials Librarian, Harvard Library Bulletin, Library Culture, International Journal of Information Technol- ogy and Decision Making, and Knowledge and Information Systems. Additionally, many other non-LIS titles are included in JCR’s citation counts but are not identified by subject category—from 1996 to 2004, 8.7 percent (9,509/109,775) of citations to LIS journals were from 392 titles with no identified JCR subject category. Further research would be needed to identify which LIS topics are most o�en exported to other fields or to fully explain why specific non-LIS titles cite the field more than others do. The results reported here could also be clarified by using other citation indexes, by selecting a list of LIS journals without relying on JCR’s subject categories, by identify- ing a core list of LIS articles and topics frequently cited by non-LIS journals, or by identifying the disciplinary af- filiations of the cited and citing authors. Additional research is also needed to place these findings in the context of the citation profiles of other Social Science subjects. Notes 1. This citation data was acquired from the Journal Citation Reports (Social Science Edition) subject category “Information Science and Library Science” (ISLS); in this paper, LIS is used interchangeably with ISLS. 2. Clement Y.K. So, “Citation Pa�erns of Core Communication Journals: An Assessment of the Developmental Status of Communication,” Human Communication Research 15, no. 2 (1988): 248. 3. Ibid., 244–49. 4. Terry Meyer and John Spencer, “A Citation Analysis Study of Library Science: Who Cites Librarians?” College & Research Libraries 57, no. 1 (1996): 31–32. 5. Ibid., 31. 6. In the year 2000, this journal changed its title to Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. 7. Meyer and Spencer, “A Citation Analysis Study of Library Science,” Table 1, 27. 8. Ibid., 29. 9. According to data in Meyer and Spencer’s Table 1 (p. 27), Scientometrics and Journal of the American Society for Information Science together received a total of 3,138 citations (905 other field citations and 2,233 LIS citations). When these citations are subtracted from Table 1, the LIS titles remaining receive 1,026 other field citations and 10,214 LIS citations. Thus, without these two titles, the percentage of other field citations would fall from 13.4% (1,931/14,378), to 9.1% (1,026/11,240) of the total citations received. 10. Ibid., 25. 11. JCR calculates a journal’s “Impact Factor” by dividing the total citations received in one year by the number of articles published in the two previous years (Journal Citation Reports, 2005). 12. Meyer and Spencer, “A Citation Analysis Study of Library Science,” 27. 13. Ibid., 23–33. 14. Eugene Garfield, “Citation Indexes for Science: A New Dimension in Documentation through Association of Ideas,” Science 122, no. 3159 (1955): 108–11; Anton J. Nederhof, “Biblio- metric Monitoring of Research Performance in the Social Sciences and the Humanities: A Review,” Scientometrics 66, no. 1 (2005): 81–100; Thomas E. Nisonger, “Use of the Journal Citation Reports for Serials Management in Research Libraries: An Investigation of the Effect of Self-citation on Journal Rankings in Library and Information Science and Genetics,” College & Research Libraries 61, no. 3 (2000): 263–75. 15. Eugene Garfield, “Citation Indexing for Studying Science,” Nature 227 (1970): 669. 16. Kevin W. Boyack, Richard Klavans, and Katy Börner, “Mapping the Backbone of Science,” Scientometrics 64, no. 3 (2005): 351–74; Bluma C. Peritz and Judit Bar-Ilan, “The Sources Used by Bibliometrics-Scientometrics as Reflected in References,” Scientometrics 54, no. 2 (2002): 269–84; Howard D. White and Katherine W. McCain, “Visualizing a Discipline: An Author Co-Citation 564 College & Research Libraries November 2008 Analysis of Information Science, 1972–1995,” Journal of the American Society for Information Science 49, no. 4 (1998): 327–55. 17. Stephen P. Harter, Thomas E. Nisonger, and Aiwei Weng, “Semantic Relationships between Cited and Citing Articles in Library and Information Science Journals,” Journal of the American Society for Information Science 44, no. 9 (1993): 544. 18. Henry G. Small, “Paradigms, Citations, and Maps of Science: A Personal History,” Journal of the American Society for Information Science 54, no. 5 (2003): 394. 19. Chaomei Chen et al., “Visualizing and Tracking the Growth of Competing Paradigms: Two Case Studies,” Journal of the American Society for Information Science 53, no. 8 (2002): 678–89; Eugene Garfield, A.I. Pudovkin, and V.S. Istomin, “Why Do We Need Algorithmic Historiogra- phy?” Journal of the American Society for Information Science 54, no. 5 (2003): 400–02. 20. White and McCain, “Visualizing a Discipline,” 353. 21. Small, “Paradigms, Citations, and Maps of Science,” 398. 22. Denise Koufogiannakis and Linda Slater, “A Content Analysis of Librarianship Research,” Journal of Information Science 30, no. 2 (2004): 227–39. 23. Robert Grover, Jack Glazier, and Maurice Tsai, “An Analysis of Library and Information Research,” Journal of Educational Media & Library Science 28, no. 3 (1991): 295–96; Jeffrey N. Gat- ten, “Paradigm Restrictions on Interdisciplinary Research into Librarianship,” College & Research Libraries 52 (Nov. 1991): 575–84; Lynne (E.F.) McKechnie and Karen E. Pe�igrew, “Surveying the Use of Theory in Library and Information Science Research: A Disciplinary Perspective,” Library Trends 50, no. 3 (2002): 406–17. 24. John M Budd, “An Epistemological Foundation for Library and Information Science,” Library Quarterly 65, no. 3 (1995): 295–318; Bill Crowley, “Redefining the Status of the Librarian in Higher Education,” College & Research Libraries 57, no. 2 (1996): 113–21; Peter Hernon, “Com- ponents of the Research Process: Where Do We Need to Focus A�ention?” Journal of Academic Librarianship 27, no. 2 (2001): 81–89. 25. Julian Warner, “W(h)ither Information Science?” Library Quarterly 71, no. 2 (2001): 243– 55. 26. In the 2004 JCR Science and Social Sciences editions, “Information Science and Library Science” titles were cross-listed in the following subject categories: “Communication,” “Computer Science, Information Systems,” “Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications,” “Geography,” “Geography, Physical,” “Law,” “Management,” “Medical Informatics,” “Multidisciplinary,” and “Social Science, Interdisciplinary.” 27. Meyer and Spencer, “A Citation Analysis Study of Library Science,” 27. 28. “Titles that cite the journal only once are listed in alphabetical order until the total number of citing titles is at least 25; all other titles that cite the journal only once are collected in the ALL OTHERS category” (Journal Citation Reports, 2005). 29. A “cited journal,” in this case, is an ISLS journal that received one or more citations from a journal belonging to a different subject category—the “citing journal.” The term “cited year” refers to the year in which the cited journal receives a citation (the citing journal’s publication year)—this o�en differs from the year in which the cited article was published. 30. JCR (Journal Citation Reports) listed Knowledge Acquisition in the ISLS category for only one year (1996) of this study. 31. JCR listed Internet World in the ISLS category for only three years (1997–1998, 2000) of this study. Other titles dropped from JCR’s list include: American Archivist (1996), Behavioral & Social Sciences Librarian (1996–2000), CD-ROM Professional (1996), International Forum on Information and Documentation (1996–1999), Journal of Education for Library and Information Science (1996–1997, 1999), International Information & Library Review (1996), Library Hi Tech (1996–1998), Special Libraries (1996–1998), and Wilson Library Bulletin (1996–1997). Recently added titles include: Information Research: An International Electronic Journal (2004), Journal of Management Information Systems (2001–2004), portal: Libraries and the Academy (2004), and Research Evaluation (2002–2004). 32. Table 6 provides an index of the JCR title abbreviations used in this paper. 33. Meyer and Spencer, “A Citation Analysis Study of Library Science,” 28. 34. Ibid., Table 1, 26. 35. Clement Y.K. So, “Citation Pa�erns of Core Communication Journals,” 248; Meyer and Spencer, “A Citation Analysis Study of Library Science,” 28. 36. See data reported in Figure 1 and Table 1: 29,622 Other Field Cites/109,775 Total Cites; 27%. 37. Meyer and Spencer, “A Citation Analysis Study of Library Science,” 26.