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Matilda: Building a bibliographic/metric tool for open citations and open science

Didier Torny ORCID (1), Laurent Capelli ORCID (2) (3), Lydie Danjean (2) (3), Stéphane Pouyllau ORCID (2) (3)
(1) Centre de Sociologie de l'Innovation i3
(2) Huma-Num : la TGIR des humanités numériques
(3) Huma-Num : l'IR* des humanités numériques
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Détails de publication
Soumis le
May 31, 2019
Accepté le
June 11, 2019
Publié le
June 11, 2019
Modifié le
March 31, 2025
Acte de conférence 2
Academic publishing and digital bibliodiversity
Long Papers
DOI
10.4000/proceedings.elpub.2019.22
Licence
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Indicateurs
443
Vues
220
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Matilda: Building a bibliographic/metric tool for open citations and open science

Didier Torny ORCID (1), Laurent Capelli ORCID (2) (3), Lydie Danjean (2) (3), Stéphane Pouyllau ORCID (2) (3)
(1) Centre de Sociologie de l'Innovation i3
(2) Huma-Num : la TGIR des humanités numériques
(3) Huma-Num : l'IR* des humanités numériques
Abstract
Although bibliometrics and library science are older, bibliometric tools were really born about 50 years ago and were only made available to a large audience with the widespread use of the Internet. Although their concrete forms have been largely modified, they are still based today on epistemic and computer foundations decided at the time. Three important characteristics of these tools can be identified: first, they are proprietary, i.e. users not only have to pay for access to the data but it is also difficult to manipulate and verify; second, in the name of a principle of scarcity or quality, tool creators assume to rely only on a selection of accessible scientific documents; thirdly, this choice of a small sample is, moreover, very marked by a historical irreversibility that makes invisible in particular some types of documents (books, conferences, preprints) and written documents in the vast majority of languages other than English. However, over the last twenty years, there has been a progressive liberation of scientific texts through the existence of different disciplinary (ArXiv, PubMedCentral, REPEC) and institutional (HAL, universities archive...) open archival systems, and publication models allowing the harvesting of texts and/or metadata - including the references cited. It is in the continuation of this movement that the construction of a real tool, Matilda, is taking into account all available sources and user personalization, in order to serve as an elementary brick for bibliographic and bibliometric research in the age of open science.
Mots-clés
français
  • [SHS.INFO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciences
anglais
  • open science
  • search engine
  • bibliographic tool
  • citation tracking
  • open citations
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