Bibliometric Analysis of Scientific Production on the COVID-19 Effect in Information Sciences
Journal:
arXiv
Published Date:
Feb 20, 2025
Abstract
This paper analyzes the scientific production on the COVID-19 effect in the
area of Information Sciences from a bibliometric perspective. The objectives
focused on: 1) determining the most productive authors, countries, institutions
and journals; 2) identifying the sources that constitute the core of scientific
production; 3) examining the manuscripts with the greatest impact; and 4)
visualizing the thematic and conceptual structure of the scientific domain
analyzed. Bibliometric indicators and factor analysis techniques were used for
data analysis. A total of 1,175 publications indexed in the Web of Science
(WoS) core collection from 2020 to 2022 were retrieved. The results showed that
the most relevant countries were the United States, United Kingdom, China and
Spain. The core of the scientific production was formed by the publications:
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, Information
Professional, Scientometrics and Journal of Health Communication. The papers
with the greatest impact were concentrated in those dedicated to the analysis
of the role of telemedicine in medical care. The conceptual structure showed
the main research fronts, such as the role of telehealth, academic libraries
and digital literacy in the fight against the pandemic, the role of social
networks in the health crisis, as well as the problem of misinformation and
fake news