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Bibliographic coupling, like
co-citation Co-citation is the frequency with which two documents are ''cited'' together by other documents.. If at least one other document cites two documents in common, these documents are said to be ''co-cited''. The more co-citations two documents recei ...
, is a
similarity measure In statistics and related fields, a similarity measure or similarity function or similarity metric is a real-valued function that quantifies the similarity between two objects. Although no single definition of a similarity exists, usually such meas ...
that uses
citation analysis Citation analysis is the examination of the frequency, patterns, and graphs of citations in documents. It uses the directed graph of citations — links from one document to another document — to reveal properties of the documents. A t ...
to establish a similarity relationship between documents. Bibliographic coupling occurs when two works
reference Reference is a relationship between objects in which one object designates, or acts as a means by which to connect to or link to, another object. The first object in this relation is said to ''refer to'' the second object. It is called a ''name'' ...
a common third work in their
bibliographies Bibliography (from and ), as a discipline, is traditionally the academic study of books as physical, cultural objects; in this sense, it is also known as bibliology (from ). English author and bibliographer John Carter describes ''bibliography ...
. It is an indication that a probability exists that the two works treat a related subject matter. Two documents are ''bibliographically coupled'' if they both ''cite'' one or more documents in common. The "coupling strength" of two given documents is higher the more citations to other documents they share. The figure to the right illustrates the concept of bibliographic coupling. In the figure, documents A and B both cite documents C, D and E. Thus, documents A and B have a bibliographic coupling strength of 3 - the number of elements in the intersection of their two reference lists. Similarly, two authors are ''bibliographically coupled'' if the cumulative reference lists of their respective oeuvres each contain a reference to a common document, and their coupling strength also increases with the citations to other documents that their share. If the cumulative reference list of an author's oeuvre is determined as the
multiset In mathematics, a multiset (or bag, or mset) is a modification of the concept of a set that, unlike a set, allows for multiple instances for each of its elements. The number of instances given for each element is called the multiplicity of that e ...
union of the documents that the author has co-authored, then the ''author bibliographic coupling strength'' of two authors (or more precisely, of their oeuvres) is defined as the size of the multiset intersection of their cumulative reference lists, however. Bibliographic coupling can be useful in a wide variety of fields, since it helps researchers find related research done in the past. On the other hand, two documents are co-cited if they are both independently ''cited by'' one or more documents.


History

The concept of bibliographic coupling was introduced by M. M. Kessler of
MIT The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is a private land-grant research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Established in 1861, MIT has played a key role in the development of modern technology and science, and is one of the m ...
in a paper published in 1963, and has been embraced in the work of the information scientist
Eugene Garfield Eugene Eli Garfield (September 16, 1925 – February 26, 2017) was an American linguist and businessman, one of the founders of bibliometrics and scientometrics. He helped to create ''Current Contents'', ''Science Citation Index'' (SCI), ''Journ ...
. It is one of the earliest citation analysis methods for document similarity computation and some have questioned its usefulness, pointing out that two works may reference completely unrelated subject matter in the third. Furthermore, bibliographic coupling is a retrospective similarity measure, meaning the information used to establish the similarity relationship between documents lies in the past and is static, i.e. bibliographic coupling strength cannot change over time, since outgoing citation counts are fixed. The co-citation analysis approach introduced by Henry Small and published in 1973 addressed this shortcoming of bibliographic coupling by considering a document's incoming citations to assess similarity, a measure that can change over time. Additionally, the co-citation measure reflects the opinion of many authors and thus represents a better indicator of subject similarity. In 1972 Robert Amsler published a paper describing a measure for determining subject similarity between two documents by fusing bibliographic coupling and co-citation analysis. In 1981 Howard White and Belver Griffith introduced author co-citation analysis (ACA). Not until 2008 did Dangzhi Zhao and Andreas Strotmann combine their work and that of M. M. Kessler to define author bibliographic coupling analysis (ABCA), noting that as long as authors are active this metric is not static and that it is particularly useful when combined with ACA. More recently, in 2009, Gipp and Beel introduced a new approach termed Co-citation Proximity Analysis (CPA). CPA is based on the concept of co-citation, but represents a refinement to Small's measure in that CPA additionally considers the placement and proximity of citations within a document's full-text. The assumption is that citations in closer proximity are more likely to exhibit a stronger similarity relationship. In summary, a chronological overview of citation analysis methods includes: * Bibliographic coupling (1963) * Co-citation analysis (published 1973) * Amsler measure (1972) * Author co-citation analysis (1981) * Author bibliographic coupling analysis (2008) * Co-citation proximity analysis (CPA) (2009)


Applications

Online sites that make use of bibliographic coupling includ
The Collection of Computer Science Bibliographies
an
CiteSeer.IST


See also

* Technical Information Project, early exploration of the concept by Meyer Mike Kessler


Notes


References


Bibliographic Coupling

* *


Author Bibliographic Coupling

*


Co-citation analysis

* * * *


Co-citation Proximity Analysis ( CPA)

* Bela Gipp, ''(Co-)Citation Proximity Analysis – A Measure to Identify Related Work'', Feb., 2006. Doctoral Proposal
VLBA-Lab
Otto-von-Guericke University, Magdeburg, Supervisor: Prof. Claus Rautenstrauch * *


Author Co-citation Analysis (ACA)

* * * * * *


Citation Studies in a More General Context

* * Henry Small (1982). "Citation context analysis." In:
Brenda Dervin Brenda Dervin, was a professor of communication at Ohio State University, working in the fields communication and library and information science. Her research about information seeking and information use led to the development of the sense- ...
and M. J. Voigt, eds., ''Progress in Communication Sciences'', volume 3, pp. 287–310. Ablex Publishing, 1982. * * * * * * * * * *


Further reading

For an interesting summary of the progression of the study of citations see.{{cite journal , last1 = Small , first1 = Henry , year = 2001 , title = Belver and Henry , doi = 10.1023/a:1019690918490 , journal = Scientometrics , volume = 51 , issue = 3, pages = 489–497 , s2cid = 5962665 The paper is more a memoir than a research paper, filled with decisions, research expectations, interests and motivations—including the story of how Henry Small approached Belver Griffith with the idea of co-citation and they became collaborators, mapping science as a whole.


External links


CITREC
an evaluation framework for citation-based similarity measures including Bibliographic Coupling,
Co-citation Co-citation is the frequency with which two documents are ''cited'' together by other documents.. If at least one other document cites two documents in common, these documents are said to be ''co-cited''. The more co-citations two documents recei ...
, Co-citation Proximity Analysis and others.Bela Gipp, Norman Meuschke & Mario Lipinski, 2015
"CITREC: An Evaluation Framework for Citation-Based Similarity Measures based on TREC Genomics and PubMed Central"
in Proceedings of the iConference 2015, Newport Beach, California, 2015.
* Jeppe Nicolaisen

in Birger Hjørland, ed.

Citation metrics