eISSN: Applied editor@oxfordianfoundation.com
Open Access

Mapping, Measuring, and Interpreting Scientific Knowledge in Global Health and Mathematics Education Through Advanced Bibliometric Frameworks

University of Buenos Aires, Argentina

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.

Keywords

References

πŸ“„ 1. Al, U. (2008). Evaluation of scientific publications: h index and performance of Turkey. Information World, 2, 263 to 285.
πŸ“„ 2. Aydin, Y. (1990). Matematik egitimi. Education and Science, 14, 75, 78 to 82.
πŸ“„ 3. Birkle, C., Pendlebury, D. A., Schnell, J., and Adams, J. (2020). Web of Science as a data source for research on scientific and scholarly activity. Quantitative Science Studies, 1, 1, 363 to 376.
πŸ“„ 4. Bordons, M., Gonzalez Albo, B., Aparicio, J., and Moreno, L. (2015). The influence of R and D intensity of countries on the impact of international collaborative research. Scientometrics, 102, 2, 1385 to 1400.
πŸ“„ 5. Boyack, K. W., and Klavans, R. (2010). Co citation analysis, bibliographic coupling, and direct citation. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 61, 12, 2389 to 2404.
πŸ“„ 6. Borner, K., Chen, C., and Boyack, K. W. (2003). Visualizing knowledge domains. Annual Review of Information Science and Technology, 37, 1, 179 to 255.
πŸ“„ 7. Cobo, M. J., Lopez Herrera, A. G., Herrera Viedma, E., and Herrera, F. (2011a). Science mapping software tools. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 62, 7, 1382 to 1402.
πŸ“„ 8. Cobo, M. J., Lopez Herrera, A. G., Herrera Viedma, E., and Herrera, F. (2011b). An approach for detecting, quantifying, and visualizing the evolution of a research field. Journal of Informetrics, 5, 1, 146 to 166.
πŸ“„ 9. Chen, G. Q. (2020). To develop a theory and practice of One Health is imperative in China. Science and Technology Review, 38, 5, 1.
πŸ“„ 10. Destoumieux Garzon, D., Mavingui, P., Boetsch, G., Boissier, J., Darriet, F., Duboz, P., Fritsch, C., Giraudoux, G., Le Roux, F., Morand, S., Paillard, C., Pontier, D., Sueur, C., and Voituron, Y. (2018). The One Health concept. Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 5, 14.
πŸ“„ 11. Ding, Y., Chowdhury, G. G., and Foo, S. (2001). Bibliometric cartography of information retrieval research by using co word analysis. Information Processing and Management, 37, 6, 817 to 842.
πŸ“„ 12. Donthu, N., Kumar, S., Mukherjee, D., Pandey, N., and Lim, W. M. (2021). How to conduct a bibliometric analysis. Journal of Business Research, 133, 285 to 296.
πŸ“„ 13. Dorfler, W. (2003). Mathematics and mathematics education. Educational Studies in Mathematics, 54, 2, 147 to 170.
πŸ“„ 14. Drijvers, P., Grauwin, S., and Trouche, L. (2020). When bibliometrics met mathematics education research. ZDM International Journal on Mathematics Education, 52, 1455 to 1469.
πŸ“„ 15. Ellegaard, O., and Wallin, J. A. (2015). The bibliometric analysis of scholarly production. Scientometrics, 105, 3, 1809 to 1831.
πŸ“„ 16. Humboldt Dachroeden, S., Rubin, O., and Frid Nielsen, S. S. (2020). The state of One Health research across disciplines and sectors. One Health, 10, 100146.
πŸ“„ 17. Miao, L., Li, H., Ding, W., Lu, S., Pan, S., Guo, X., Zhou, X., and Wang, D. (2022). Research priorities on One Health. Frontiers in Public Health, 10, 889854.
πŸ“„ 18. Mongeon, P., and Paul Hus, A. P. (2016). The journal coverage of Web of Science and Scopus. Scientometrics, 106, 1, 213 to 228.
πŸ“„ 19. Moher, D., Liberati, A., Tetzlaff, J., Altman, D. G., and PRISMA Group. (2009). Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta analyses. PLoS Medicine, 6, 7, e1000097.
πŸ“„ 20. Nie, E. Q., Xia, Y., Wang, T., and Lu, J. H. (2016). One Health a new approach to control emerging infectious diseases. Journal of Microbial Infection, 11, 3 to 7.
πŸ“„ 21. Van Eck, N. J., and Waltman, L. (2010). Software survey VOSviewer. Scientometrics, 84, 2, 523 to 538.
πŸ“„ 22. Velavan, T. P., and Christian, C. G. (2020). The COVID 19 epidemic. Tropical Medicine and International Health, 25, 3, 278 to 280.
πŸ“„ 23. WHO. (2021). Tripartite and UNEP support OHHLEP definition of One Health. World Health Organization.
πŸ“„ 24. Guiling, Y., Panatik, S. A., Sukor, M. S. M., Rusbadrol, N., and Cunlin, L. (2022). Bibliometric analysis of global research on organizational citizenship behavior. SAGE Open, 12, 1.
Views: 0    Downloads: 0
Views
Downloads

Similar Articles

11-13 of 13

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.