Thomson Reuters Collaborates with Russia's Scientific Electronic Library eLibrary.RU to Showcase Nation's Leading Research in Web of Science
Initiative expands opportunities to search, track and measure regional research and strengthens Russian scientists' connections with the global scientific community.
PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 1, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- The Intellectual Property & Science business of Thomson Reuters, the world's leading provider of intelligent information for businesses and professionals, has announced a collaboration with Russia's Scientific Electronic Library eLibrary.ru to make content from the Russian Science Citation Index accessible via the Web of Science™ , the premier global search and discovery platform for the sciences, social sciences and arts and humanities.
The initiative will bring greater visibility and improved access to influential research being produced in Russia, particularly in the sciences. Content from the Russian Science Citation Index (1000 top-tier scholarly publications in Russia) will be made available as a new dataset on the Web of Science. It will seamlessly connect to the leading core journal indices within the Web of Science, and other databases on the platform such as the Data Citation Index(SM), and the Book Citation Index(SM), enabling researchers to review and analyze the regional research alongside top-tier international scholarly content.
"We are pleased to collaborate with Thomson Reuters to get Russian researchers more involved into the international scholarly conversation," said Gennady Eremenko, general director of Scientific Electronic Library. "Not only will this effort increase the visibility and global impact of Russia's research efforts, but it will also enable our researchers to connect with others throughout the world to discuss new ideas and inspire greater collaboration."
The addition of the Russian Science Citation Index to the Web of Science will follow a similar model to other national citation indices such as the KCI Korean Journal Database and the SciELO Citation Index, both added to the platform in 2014; and the Chinese Science Citation Database, hosted within the Web of Science since 2008. The expanded global coverage enabled by these regional collections are part of Thomson Reuters ongoing efforts to further integrate high-quality, global content into the Web of Science, spotlight regionally relevant scholarly literature, and identify influential authors and research within rapidly developing research centers. The Russian Science Citation Index will be available to Web of Science users in 2015.
"As the research landscape continues to expand, it is increasingly important to provide the global scholarly community with content from actively developing research centers, such as the BRIC nations," said Gordon Macomber, managing director of Thomson Reuters IP & Science. "We are pleased to work with the Scientific Electronic Library eLibrary to include this influential information within the Web of Science and give researchers around the world deeper insight into research and innovation coming from Russia."
Learn more about the Web of Science.
Scientific Electronic Library
The Scientific Electronic Library is a key Russian provider of scientific information and analytical and data services. eLIBRARY.RU is a major Russian scientific aggregator service providing universities, research organizations, and R&D companies with access to the online library of scholarly articles and books, citation indexing and discovery services. For more information, please, visit www.elibrary.ru.
Thomson Reuters
Thomson Reuters is the world's leading source of intelligent information for businesses and professionals. We combine industry expertise with innovative technology to deliver critical information to leading decision makers in the financial and risk, legal, tax and accounting, intellectual property and science and media markets, powered by the world's most trusted news organization. For more information, go to www.thomsonreuters.com.
CONTACT
Thomson Reuters
Jen Breen
+1 215 823 1791
[email protected]
Molly Malone
+1 215 823 3702
[email protected]
Scientific Electronic Library
Konstantin Kokarev
+7 495 544 2494
[email protected]
SOURCE Thomson Reuters
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