Tags:bibliometric analysis, bibliometric coronavirus-related, Climate Change, COVID-19 and SARS-CoV-2
Abstract:
Many articles during the COVID-19 pandemic have been published in several scientific journals, but there is no such bibliometric study published on Covid-19 and climate change. On 22nd Jan 2021, around 405 publications were retrieved from the Web of Science Core Collection and 325 articles is selected for a study after removing irrelevant publications. A bibliometric analysis was performed with the retrieved data from reputable sources harvesting relevant records. This research work concentrated on summarizing publications that addressed the main themes on the topic of climate change and viruses. the present study aimed to review and analyze the publishing trends on climate change literature focusing on top-cited documents, productive countries, institutions, journals, authorship and collaboration, the most frequent keywords used, funding bodies, climate change, climate emergency, climate crisis, climate breakdown, global heating, global warming, and Covid 19-SARS-CoV-2-coronavirus-related concerns among others. Timespan tackled approximately all years. Indexes: Science Citation Index Expanded )SCI-expanded(, Social Sciences Citation Index )SSCI(, Arts & Humanities Citation Index (A&HCI), Conference Proceedings Citation Index- Science (CPCI-S), Core Collection Citation Index - Social Sciences & Humanities (CPCI-SSH), Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI), Current Chemical Reactions (CCR-expanded), Index Chemicus (IC). The data analysis was performed using various bibliometric software. The statistical-related parameters and indexes are to be related in an integrated pattern. This is in an endeavor to rank entities with top journal articles, the most influential country with the highest Citation Impact, the top journal for climate change studies with the highest number of papers and citation impact, the trend of author publications-author pattern, and published papers dominating domain.
Mapping the Scientific Literature on COVID-19 and Climate Change