Variation of the half-life of literature in the population of references cited in geographical journals in the age of the publication explosion

Authors

  • Száva-Kováts Endre

Abstract

The article concludes the first part of the author's investigations into the half-life of literature - a concept having become popular in informatics for supposedly measuring the rate of obsolescence of scientific and technical literature — and its variations. At the macro-level the study was based on natural science journals, at the meso-level on geographical journals. As an approval test of the past investigations the article presents the variation of the half-life of literature in the population of references cited in geographical journal articles published in 1939 and in 1969.

The main results of the approval test are:
1. in the period investigated the average size of geographical journal articles has hardly changed, while the average number of references per article has doubled;
2. the half-life of the increased population of references has, in generál, not decreased, but increased, on the average by 15%;
3. the average age of life of the increased population of references has, in general, not decreased, but increased on the average by 18%.
The results of the approval test are completely in conformity with the conclusions of the author's investigations published so-far, confirm his former results and refute the notion of the half-life of literature and the ídeas about the variation of the half-life prevalent nowadays in the public opinion.
The investigations will be continued in the future on the micro-level of articles and references, and will close by the study of the theoretical problems involved.

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Published

2018-11-06

How to Cite

Endre, S. Variation of the half-life of literature in the population of references cited in geographical journals in the age of the publication explosion, Scientific and Technical Information, 23(10), p. 401–412, 2018.

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Section

Articles