Usage Bibliometrics as a Tool to Measure Research Activity
Edwin A. Henneken, Michael J. Kurtz

TL;DR
This paper explores how clickstream download data can complement traditional bibliometric measures to better assess research activity and impact across various entities.
Contribution
It introduces the use of download statistics and clickstream data as new metrics for measuring research activity, addressing limitations of citation-based indicators.
Findings
Download patterns correlate with socio-economic indicators.
Clickstream data provides insights beyond citation counts.
Download metrics can identify impactful publications with few citations.
Abstract
Measures for research activity and impact have become an integral ingredient in the assessment of a wide range of entities (individual researchers, organizations, instruments, regions, disciplines). Traditional bibliometric indicators, like publication and citation based indicators, provide an essential part of this picture, but cannot describe the complete picture. Since reading scholarly publications is an essential part of the research life cycle, it is only natural to introduce measures for this activity in attempts to quantify the efficiency, productivity and impact of an entity. Citations and reads are significantly different signals, so taken together, they provide a more complete picture of research activity. Most scholarly publications are now accessed online, making the study of reads and their patterns possible. Click-stream logs allow us to follow information access by the…
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