Korean Research Added To Web Of Science

Information from the Korean Citation Index will now be made available through the Web of Science, enhancing the profile of Korean research.

AsianScientist (May 8, 2014) – Information provider Thomson Reuters will collaborate with the National Research Foundation of Korea to make content from the Korean Citation Index (KCI) accessible via the Web of ScienceTM, a search and discovery platform for the sciences, social sciences, and arts and humanities.

The KCI content will be made available as a new dataset, the KCI Korean Journal Database, on the Web of Science platform. The database will provide access to text from approximately 2,000 scholarly journals, over 1,800 of which are new to the Web of Science

In addition, the database will connect to indices within the Web of Science, including the Data Citation IndexSM, MEDLINE® and BIOSIS Citation IndexSM, enabling researchers to review and analyze the regional content alongside international literature.

“Researchers around the globe will have access to our scholarly works, allowing for greater collaboration and the ability to foster ideas on an international level,” said Dr. Kim So Hyung, research director for the National Research Foundation of Korea.

The addition of the KCI Korean Journal Database to the Web of Science will follow a similar model to that of the SciELO Citation Index, which was integrated within the Web of Science in early 2014, as well as the Chinese Science Citation Database, hosted within the Web of Science since 2008. The KCI Korean Journal Database will be accessible to all Web of Science users in the latter part of 2014.

The addition of the KCI Korean Journal Database to the Web of Science will further highlight South Korea’s rapidly growing global performance in scientific research, by increasing the number of indexed papers — produced from 2002 to 2012 — by 127 percent, increasing from 20,755 to 47,066 papers.

Physical sciences and engineering are the dominant sectors of South Korea’s scientific research portfolio; from 2008 to 2012, the nation’s largest world share was in engineering and technology (5.7 percent), followed by physical sciences and astronomy (5 percent), chemical sciences (4.6 percent), and computer and information sciences (4 percent).

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Source: Thomson Reuters; Photo: U.S. Army Korea (Historial Image Archive)/Flickr/CC.

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