Transfer

At Prime Time, we seek to share our knowledge by promoting effective two-way transfer between the academic community and society. We want our results to be accessible to all interested parties.

Here you can find all the production related to the project

Abstract:

Given the importance of Google Search in generating visits to institutional repositories (IR), a lack of visibility in search engine results pages can hinder the possibility of their publications being found, read, downloaded, and, eventually, cited. To address this, institutions need to evaluate the visibility of their repositories to determine what actions might be implemented to enhance them. However, measuring the search engine optimization (SEO) visibility of IRs requires a highly accurate, technically feasible method. This study constitutes the first attempt to design such a method, specifically applied here to measuring the IR visibility of Spain’s national university system in Google Search based on a set of SEO-based metrics derived from the Ubersuggest SEO tool. A comprehensive dataset spanning three months and comprising 217,589 bibliographic records and 316,899 organic keywords is used as a baseline. Our findings show that many records deposited in these repositories are not ranked among the top positions in Google Search results, and that the most visible records are mainly academic works (theses and dissertations) written in Spanish in the Humanities and Social Sciences. However, most visits are generated by a small number of records. All in all, our results call into question the role played by IRs in attracting readers via Google Search to the institutions’ scientific heritage and serve to underscore the prevailing emphasis within IRs on preservation as opposed to online dissemination. Potential improvements might be achieved using enhanced metadata schemes and normalized description practices, as well as by adopting other actionable insights that can strengthen the online visibility of IRs. This study increases understanding of the role played by web indicators in assessing the web-based impact of research outputs deposited in IRs, and should be of particular interest for a range of stakeholders, including open access and open science advocates, research agencies, library practitioners, repository developers, and website administrators.

Keywords:

Academic SEO, Altmetrics, Institutional Repositories, Open Access, Spain, Universities

Authors:

Orduña-Malea, Enrique; Font-Julian, Cristina I.; Serrano-Cobos, Jorge

Cite:

Orduña-Malea, E., Font-Julián, C.I. & Serrano-Cobos, J. Open access publications drive few visits from Google Search results to institutional repositories. Scientometrics (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11192-024-05175-0

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Abstract:

This dataset includes supplementary material (code, raw data) created and collected to support a study on the visibility of Spanish Institutional Repositories on Google Search results.

Keywords:

Academic SEO (ASEO), Altmetrics,  Google Search, Institutional Repositories, Open Access, Search Engines, SEO metrics, Spain, Universities

Authors:

Orduña-Malea, Enrique; Font-Julian, Cristina I.; Serrano-Cobos, Jorge

Cite:

Orduña Malea, E.; Font Julián, CI.; Serrano Cobos, JI. (2024). Spanish Institutional repositories: An A-SEO data collection. Universitat Politècnica de València. https://doi.org/10.4995/Dataset/10251/209311

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