A bibliometric analysis of literature on hand-transmitted vibration in China, 1990-2016
10.3760/cma.j.issn.1001-9391.2017.12.013
- VernacularTitle: 我国1990~2016年手传振动相关文献的计量学分析
- Author:
Liuquan JIANG
1
;
Gaisheng LIU
;
Zhizhong YANG
;
Xiaojun SHEN
;
Fan YANG
;
Zhechen ZHANG
;
Libin GONG
Author Information
1. Department of Occupational Disease Control and Prevention of Xishan Coal and Electricity (Group) Co., Ltd, Taiyuan 030053, China
- Publication Type:Case Reports
- Keywords:
Vibration;
Hand-transmitted vibration;
Bibliometrics
- From:
Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases
2017;35(12):932-935
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To investigate the features of literature on hand-transmitted vibration in China, 1990-2016.
Methods:In September 2017, the studies on hand-transmitted vibration in China, which were published in Chinese or English during 1990-2016, with "China" and "Taiwan" as the places where author affiliations were located, were retrieved. A bibliometric analysis was performed to investigate the type of articles, publication time, the journals in which articles were published, author affiliations, author regions, and funding.
Results:A total of 205 articles on hand-transmitted vibration were retrieved. There were 7.59 articles on average published annually from 1990 to 2016. In the 205 articles, 114 (55.61%) were published in the journals indexed in one or two core journal databases. In the 64 journals, 22 (34.38%) were indexed in one or two core journal databases. The first authors were from 22 provincial regions (provinces, autonomous regions, or centrally administered municipalities) in China, with 152 articles (74.15%) by the authors in the top five regions. There were a total of 876 authors, and the co-authorship degree was 4.27 (876/205). Most of the first authors (136 articles, 66.34%) were affiliated with universities or institutes for prevention and control of occupational diseases. Among the 205 articles, 103 (50.24%) were original articles or investigations, and 72 (35.12%) were funded.
Conclusion:The studies on hand-transmitted vibration fluctuated and increased from 1990 to 2016, with a relatively concentrated distribution in terms of sources, regions, and institutions. Interregional and international academic exchange should be strengthened.