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bibliometrix

An R-tool for comprehensive science mapping analysis.

Overview

bibliometrix package provides a set of tools for quantitative research in bibliometrics and scientometrics.

Bibliometrics turns the main tool of science, quantitative analysis, on itself. Essentially, bibliometrics is the application of quantitative analysis and statistics to publications such as journal articles and their accompanying citation counts. Quantitative evaluation of publication and citation data is now used in almost all scientific fields to evaluate growth, maturity, leading authors, conceptual and intellectual maps, trends of a scientific community.

Bibliometrics is also used in research performance evaluation, especially in university and government labs, and also by policymakers, research directors and administrators, information specialists and librarians, and scholars themselves.

bibliometrix supports scholars in three key phases of analysis:

  • Data importing and conversion to R format;

  • Bibliometric analysis of a publication dataset;

  • Building and plotting matrices for co-citation, coupling, collaboration, and co-word analysis. Matrices are the input data for performing network analysis, multiple correspondence analysis, and any other data reduction techniques.

biblioshiny

bibliometrix includes biblioshiny: bibliometrix for no-coders

biblioshiny is a shiny app providing a web-interface for bibliometrix.

It supports scholars in easy use of the main features of bibliometrix:

  • Data importing and conversion to data frame collection

  • Data filtering

  • Analytics and Plots for three different level metrics:

    • Sources

    • Authors

    • Documents

  • Analysis of three structures of Knowledge (K-structures):

    • Conceptual Structure

    • Intellectual Structure

    • Social Strucutre

How to use biblioshiny

Please follow the biblioshiny tutorial at www.bibliometrix.org/biblioshiny

Suggested citation

If you use this package for your research, we would appreciate a citation.

To cite bibliometrix in publications, please use:

Aria, M. & Cuccurullo, C. (2017) bibliometrix: An R-tool for comprehensive science mapping analysis, Journal of Informetrics, 11(4), pp 959-975, Elsevier.

Community

Official website: https://www.bibliometrix.org

CRAN page: https://cran.r-project.org/package=bibliometrix

GitHub repository: https://github.com/massimoaria/bibliometrix

Tutorial: http://htmlpreview.github.io/?https://github.com/massimoaria/bibliometrix/master/vignettes/bibliometrix-vignette.html

Slides: https://www.slideshare.net/MassimoAria/bibliometrix-phd-seminar

Installation

Stable version from CRAN

install.packages("bibliometrix")

Developers version from GitHub

install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("massimoaria/bibliometrix")

Load bibliometrix

library('bibliometrix')

Data loading and converting

The export file can be read and converted using by R using the function convert2df:

convert2df(file, dbsource, format)

The argument file is a character vector containing the name of export files downloaded from SCOPUS, Clarivate Analytics WOS, Digital Science Dimenions, PubMed or Cochrane CDSR website. file can also contains the name of a json/xlm object download using Digital Science Dimenions or PubMed APIs (through the packages dimensionsR and pubmedR.

es. file <- c("file1.txt","file2.txt", ...)

## An example from bibliometrix vignettes

file <- "https://www.bibliometrix.org/datasets/savedrecs.bib"

M <- convert2df(file = file, dbsource = "isi", format = "bibtex")

convert2df creates a bibliographic data frame with cases corresponding to manuscripts and variables to Field Tag in the original export file.

Each manuscript contains several elements, such as authors' names, title, keywords and other information. All these elements constitute the bibliographic attributes of a document, also called metadata.

Data frame columns are named using the standard Clarivate Analytics WoS Field Tag codify (http://www.bibliometrix.org/documents/Field_Tags_bibliometrix.pdf).

Bibliometric Analysis

The first step is to perform a descriptive analysis of the bibliographic data frame.

The function biblioAnalysis calculates main bibliometric measures using this syntax:

results <- biblioAnalysis(M, sep = ";")

The function biblioAnalysis returns an object of class "bibliometrix".

To summarize main results of the bibliometric analysis, use the generic function summary. It displays main information about the bibliographic data frame and several tables, such as annual scientific production, top manuscripts per number of citations, most productive authors, most productive countries, total citation per country, most relevant sources (journals) and most relevant keywords.

summary accepts two additional arguments. k is a formatting value that indicates the number of rows of each table. pause is a logical value (TRUE or FALSE) used to allow (or not) pause in screen scrolling. Choosing k=10 you decide to see the first 10 Authors, the first 10 sources, etc.

S <- summary(object = results, k = 10, pause = FALSE)

Some basic plots can be drawn using the generic function plot:

plot(x = results, k = 10, pause = FALSE)

Bibliographic network matrices

Manuscript's attributes are connected to each other through the manuscript itself: author(s) to journal, keywords to publication date, etc.

These connections of different attributes generate bipartite networks that can be represented as rectangular matrices (Manuscripts x Attributes).

Furthermore, scientific publications regularly contain references to other scientific works. This generates a further network, namely, co-citation or coupling network.

These networks are analyzed in order to capture meaningful properties of the underlying research system, and in particular to determine the influence of bibliometric units such as scholars and journals.

biblioNetwork function

The function biblioNetwork calculates, starting from a bibliographic data frame, the most frequently used networks: Coupling, Co-citation, Co-occurrences, and Collaboration.

biblioNetwork uses two arguments to define the network to compute:

  • analysis argument can be "co-citation", "coupling", "collaboration", or "co-occurrences".

  • network argument can be "authors", "references", "sources", "countries", "universities", "keywords", "author_keywords", "titles" and "abstracts".

i.e. the following code calculates a classical co-citation network:

NetMatrix <- biblioNetwork(M, analysis = "co-citation", network = "references", sep = ".  ")

Visualizing bibliographic networks

All bibliographic networks can be graphically visualized or modeled.

Using the function networkPlot, you can plot a network created by biblioNetwork using R routines.

The main argument of networkPlot is type. It indicates the network map layout: circle, kamada-kawai, mds, etc.

In the following, we propose some examples.

Country Scientific Collaboration

# Create a country collaboration network

M <- metaTagExtraction(M, Field = "AU_CO", sep = ";")
NetMatrix <- biblioNetwork(M, analysis = "collaboration", network = "countries", sep = ";")

# Plot the network
net=networkPlot(NetMatrix, n = dim(NetMatrix)[1], Title = "Country Collaboration", type = "circle", size=TRUE, remove.multiple=FALSE,labelsize=0.8)

Co-Citation Network

# Create a co-citation network

NetMatrix <- biblioNetwork(M, analysis = "co-citation", network = "references", sep = ".  ")

# Plot the network
net=networkPlot(NetMatrix, n = 30, Title = "Co-Citation Network", type = "fruchterman", size=T, remove.multiple=FALSE, labelsize=0.7,edgesize = 5)

Keyword co-occurrences

# Create keyword co-occurrences network

NetMatrix <- biblioNetwork(M, analysis = "co-occurrences", network = "keywords", sep = ";")

# Plot the network
net=networkPlot(NetMatrix, normalize="association", weighted=T, n = 30, Title = "Keyword Co-occurrences", type = "fruchterman", size=T,edgesize = 5,labelsize=0.7)

Co-Word Analysis: The conceptual structure of a field

The aim of the co-word analysis is to map the conceptual structure of a framework using the word co-occurrences in a bibliographic collection.

The analysis can be performed through dimensionality reduction techniques such as Multidimensional Scaling (MDS), Correspondence Analysis (CA) or Multiple Correspondence Analysis (MCA).

Here, we show an example using the function conceptualStructure that performs a CA or MCA to draw a conceptual structure of the field and K-means clustering to identify clusters of documents which express common concepts. Results are plotted on a two-dimensional map.

conceptualStructure includes natural language processing (NLP) routines (see the function termExtraction) to extract terms from titles and abstracts. In addition, it implements the Porter's stemming algorithm to reduce inflected (or sometimes derived) words to their word stem, base or root form.


# Conceptual Structure using keywords (method="CA")

CS <- conceptualStructure(M,field="ID", method="CA", minDegree=4, k.max=8, stemming=FALSE, labelsize=10, documents=10)

Historical Direct Citation Network

The historiographic map is a graph proposed by E. Garfield to represent a chronological network map of most relevant direct citations resulting from a bibliographic collection.

The function histNetwork generates a chronological direct citation network matrix which can be plotted using histPlot:

# Create a historical citation network

histResults <- histNetwork(M, sep = ".  ")

# Plot a historical co-citation network
net <- histPlot(histResults, n=20, size = FALSE,label=TRUE, arrowsize = 0.5)

Main Authors' references (about bibliometrics)

Aria, M. & Cuccurullo, C. (2017). bibliometrix: An R-tool for comprehensive science mapping analysis, Journal of Informetrics, 11(4), pp 959-975, Elsevier, DOI: 10.1016/j.joi.2017.08.007 (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joi.2017.08.007).

Cuccurullo, C., Aria, M., & Sarto, F. (2016). Foundations and trends in performance management. A twenty-five years bibliometric analysis in business and public administration domains, Scientometrics, DOI: 10.1007/s11192-016-1948-8 (https://doi.org/10.1007/s11192-016-1948-8).

Cuccurullo, C., Aria, M., & Sarto, F. (2015). Twenty years of research on performance management in business and public administration domains. Presentation at the Correspondence Analysis and Related Methods conference (CARME 2015) in September 2015 (http://www.bibliometrix.org/documents/2015Carme_cuccurulloetal.pdf).

Sarto, F., Cuccurullo, C., & Aria, M. (2014). Exploring healthcare governance literature: systematic review and paths for future research. Mecosan (http://www.francoangeli.it/Riviste/Scheda_Rivista.aspx?IDarticolo=52780&lingua=en).

Cuccurullo, C., Aria, M., & Sarto, F. (2013). Twenty years of research on performance management in business and public administration domains. In Academy of Management Proceedings (Vol. 2013, No. 1, p. 14270). Academy of Management (https://doi.org/10.5465/AMBPP.2013.14270abstract).

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Version

Install

install.packages('bibliometrix')

Monthly Downloads

29,475

Version

3.0.0

License

GPL-3

Issues

Pull Requests

Stars

Forks

Maintainer

Massimo Aria

Last Published

March 18th, 2025

Functions in bibliometrix (3.0.0)

biblioshiny

Shiny UI for bibliometrix package
authorProdOverTime

Top-Authors' Productivity over the Time
biblio

Dataset of "Bibliometrics" scientific documents.
biblioAnalysis

Bibliometric Analysis
biblioNetwork

Creating Bibliographic networks
bibliometrix-package

bibliometrix
bibtag

Tag list and bibtex fields.
biblio_df

Dataset of "Bibliometrics" manuscripts.
fieldByYear

Field Tag distribution by Year
dominance

Authors' dominance ranking
duplicatedMatching

Searching of duplicated records in a bibliographic database
bradford

Bradford's law
garfield

Eugene Garfield's manuscripts.
mergeDbSources

Merge bibliographic data frames from SCOPUS and WoS
localCitations

Author local citations
keywordAssoc

ID and DE keyword associations
management

The use of bibliometric approaches in business and management disciplines.
countries

Index of Countries.
convert2df

Import and Convert bibliographic export files and API objects.
lotka

Lotka's law coefficient estimation
readFiles

DEPRECATED: Load a sequence of ISI or SCOPUS Export files into a large character object
metaTagExtraction

Meta-Field Tag Extraction
retrievalByAuthorID

Get Author Content on SCOPUS by ID
rpys

Reference Publication Year Spectroscopy
scientometrics

"Co-citation analysis" and "Coupling analysis" manuscripts.
citations

Citation frequency distribution
plotThematicEvolution

Plot a Thematic Evolution Analysis
plot.bibliometrix

Plotting bibliometric analysis results
tableTag

Tabulate elements from a Tag Field column
termExtraction

Term extraction tool from textual fields of a manuscript
threeFieldsPlot

Three Fields Plot
histNetwork

Historical co-citation network
histPlot

Plotting historical co-citation network
timeslice

Bibliographic data frame time slice
summary.bibliometrix

Summarizing bibliometric analysis results
summary.bibliometrix_netstat

Summarizing network analysis results
networkStat

Calculating network summary statistics
normalizeSimilarity

Calculate similarity indices
scientometrics_text

"Co-citation analysis" and "Coupling analysis" manuscripts.
Hindex

h-index calculation
KeywordGrowth

Yearly occurrences of top keywords/terms
scopusCollection

"Bibliometrics" manuscripts from SCOPUS.
conceptualStructure

Creating and plotting conceptual structure map of a scientific field
idByAuthor

Get Complete Author Information and ID from Scopus
cocMatrix

Co-occurrence matrix
trimES

Deleting extra white spaces
networkPlot

Plotting Bibliographic networks
thematicEvolution

Perform a Thematic Evolution Analysis
thematicMap

Create a thematic map
net2VOSviewer

Open a bibliometrix network in VosViewer
isiCollection

"Bibliometrics" manuscripts from Clarivate Analytics WoS.
trim

Deleting leading and ending white spaces
sourceGrowth

Number of documents published annually per Top Sources
trim.leading

Deleting leading white spaces
stopwords

List of English stopwords.