TY - JOUR
T1 - Ideational influence, connectedness, and venue representation
T2 - Making an assessment of scholarly capital
AU - Cuellar, Michael J.
AU - Takeda, Hirotoshi
AU - Vidgen, Richard
AU - Truex, Duane
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 by the Association for Information Systems.
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - Assessing the research capital that a scholar has accrued is an essential task for academic administrators, funding agencies, and promotion and tenure committees worldwide. Scholars have criticized the existing methodology of counting papers in ranked journals and made calls to replace it (Adler & Harzing, 2009; Singh, Haddad, & Chow, 2007). In its place, some have made calls to assess the uptake of a scholar’s work instead of assessing “quality” (Truex, Cuellar, Takeda, & Vidgen, 2011a). We identify three dimensions of scholarly capital (ideational influence (who uses one’s work?), connectedness (with whom does one work?) and venue representation (where does one publish their work?)) in this paper as part of a scholarly capital model (SCM). We develop measurement models for the three dimensions of scholarly capital and test the relationships in a path model. We show how one might use the measures to evaluate scholarly research activity.
AB - Assessing the research capital that a scholar has accrued is an essential task for academic administrators, funding agencies, and promotion and tenure committees worldwide. Scholars have criticized the existing methodology of counting papers in ranked journals and made calls to replace it (Adler & Harzing, 2009; Singh, Haddad, & Chow, 2007). In its place, some have made calls to assess the uptake of a scholar’s work instead of assessing “quality” (Truex, Cuellar, Takeda, & Vidgen, 2011a). We identify three dimensions of scholarly capital (ideational influence (who uses one’s work?), connectedness (with whom does one work?) and venue representation (where does one publish their work?)) in this paper as part of a scholarly capital model (SCM). We develop measurement models for the three dimensions of scholarly capital and test the relationships in a path model. We show how one might use the measures to evaluate scholarly research activity.
KW - Affiliation network analysis
KW - Bibliometrics
KW - Citation analysis
KW - Connectedness
KW - Hirsch family indices
KW - IS research evaluation
KW - Ideational influence
KW - Scholarly capital
KW - Scientometrics
KW - Social network analysis
KW - Venue representation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84957033243&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.17705/1jais.00419
DO - 10.17705/1jais.00419
M3 - Article
SN - 1558-3457
VL - 17
SP - 1
EP - 28
JO - Journal of the Association for Information Systems
JF - Journal of the Association for Information Systems
IS - 1
ER -