A26. Rice,
R. E., Borgman, C. & Reeves, B. (1988). Citation networks of
communication
journals, 1977-1985: Cliques and positions, citations made and
citations
received. Human Comunication Research, 15(2), 256-283. (A
Top paper at the International Communication Association conference,
1988.)
This article analyzes the pattern of citations among all
communication
journals covered by the first nine years of the Journal Citation
Reports
volume of the Social Sciences Citation Index. It approaches these
analyses from two perspectives: (1) bibliometric analysis of citation
flows,
ratios, and impact factors, and (2) network analysis of both
cohesion-based
citation patterns. The field of communication exhibits clear clustering
and inbreeding, consisting of cliques of interpersonal journals, mass
media
journals, and residual isolate journals. Citation patterns within and
across
these cliques have been very stable from 1977 through 1985. The
cohesion
analyses show that Human Communication Research and Communication
Education
provide weak ties from mass media journals to interpersonal
communication
journals. The Journal Communication is cited the most strongly by the
most
journals, and provides, by means of citations, bidirectional channels
for
the flow of scientific information between mass media journals and
interpersonal
journals. The positional analyses show that the set of journals that
has
similar citing patterns is somewhat different for the set of journals
that
is cited similarly. In particular, the set of sources for the research
reported in articles in these journals is not similar to the set of
journals
that refer to the articles in these journals.
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