Mapping, Measuring, and Interpreting Scientific Knowledge in Global Health and Mathematics Education Through Advanced Bibliometric Frameworks
Abstract
Bibliometric analysis has become one of the most influential methodological foundations for understanding how scientific knowledge is produced, structured, disseminated, and evaluated across disciplines. In recent decades, the growing volume of scientific publications, the expansion of digital indexing platforms, and the increasing emphasis on accountability in research systems have created an urgent need for robust, transparent, and theoretically grounded approaches to research evaluation. This article presents an integrated and comprehensive examination of bibliometric frameworks as they apply to two complex and socially significant domains, namely mathematics education and One Health research. Drawing strictly on the provided corpus of references, the study situates classical bibliometric indicators such as the h index within broader epistemological debates about scientific impact, national research performance, and disciplinary identity, while also incorporating advanced science mapping and visualization techniques that reveal the cognitive and collaborative structures of knowledge production.
The article first establishes the theoretical foundations of bibliometrics by examining how citation based metrics emerged as proxies for scholarly influence and how they have been adapted to evaluate national and institutional research systems, as demonstrated in the assessment of Turkey scientific output through the h index approach as discussed by Al in 2008. It then expands the analysis to include the role of large scale bibliographic databases such as Web of Science, whose coverage and classification practices significantly shape what is measured and how it is interpreted, as critically analyzed by Birkle and colleagues in 2020 and by Mongeon and Paul Hus in 2016. These infrastructural dimensions of bibliometrics are linked to methodological innovations in science mapping, including co citation analysis, bibliographic coupling, and co word analysis, which provide distinct yet complementary perspectives on the intellectual organization of research fields as articulated by Boyack and Klavans in 2010, Ding and colleagues in 2001, and Borner and colleagues in 2003.
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