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1. Cognitive authority: A scoping review of empirical research. An Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (ARIST) paper.

2. Trends in information behavior research, 2016–2022: An Annual Review of Information Science and Technology paper.

3. Factors associating with or predicting more cited or higher quality journal articles: An Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (ARIST) paper.

4. Value co‐creation in cultural heritage information practices: Literature review and future agenda: An Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (ARIST) paper.

5. Phenomenon‐based classification: An Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (ARIST) paper.

6. Socio‐technical issues in the platform‐mediated gig economy: A systematic literature review: An Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (ARIST) paper.

7. Understanding data culture/s: Influences, activities, and initiatives: An Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (ARIST) paper.

8. Information science and the inevitable: A literature review at the intersection of death and information management: An Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (ARIST) paper.

9. Reviews and Reviewing: Approaches to Research Synthesis. An Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (ARIST) paper.

10. Classifying papers into subfields using Abstracts, Titles, Keywords and KeyWords Plus through pattern detection and optimization procedures: An application in Physics.

11. The first impression of conference papers: Does it matter in predicting future citations?

12. Manifestation of emerging specialties in journal literature: A growth model of papers, references, exemplars, bibliographic coupling, cocitation, and clustering coefficient distribution.

13. Highly cited papers in Library and Information Science ( LIS): Authors, institutions, and network structures.

14. Quantifying scientific breakthroughs by a novel disruption indicator based on knowledge entities.

15. Does double‐blind peer review reduce bias? Evidence from a top computer science conference.

16. An Application of a Type of Matrix to Analyze Citations of Scientific Papers.

17. A structured representation of researcher interests for filtering of research journals and proceedings papers.

18. Information retrieval using conceptual index terms for technical papers in a digital library.

19. How are the best <italic>JASIST</italic> papers cited?

20. Pandemics are catalysts of scientific novelty: Evidence from COVID‐19.

21. Disclosing the relationship between citation structure and future impact of a publication.

22. Generating keyphrases for readers: A controllable keyphrase generation framework.

23. Visual overviews for discovering key papers and influences across research fronts.

24. The differences between latent topics in abstracts and citation contexts of citing papers.

25. Statistical validation of a global model for the distribution of the ultimate number of citations accrued by papers published in a scientific journal.

26. Power-law link strength distribution in paper cocitation networks.

27. A comparison between the China Scientific and Technical Papers and Citations Database and the Science Citation Index in terms of journal hierarchies and interjournal citation relations.

28. Comparative citation analysis of duplicate or highly related publications.

29. Predicting coauthorship using bibliographic network embedding.

30. The Combined Use of Bibliographic Coupling and Cocitation for Document Retrieval.

31. Citation of the Literature by Information Scientists in Their Own Publications.

32. ePaper: A personalized mobile newspaper.

33. What happens to computer science research after it is published? Tracking CS research lines.

34. Extracting the evolutionary backbone of scientific domains: The semantic main path network analysis approach based on citation context analysis.

35. International coauthorship and citation impact: A bibliometric study of six LIS journals, 1980-2008.

36. Bias against scientific novelty: A prepublication perspective.

37. A bibliometric and network analysis of the field of computational linguistics.

38. Quantifying Scholarly Impact: IQp Versus the Hirsch h.

39. Who's Who in Conservation Biology—an Authorship Analysis.

40. Trans-scientific frameworks of knowing: complementarity views of the different types of human knowledge<FNR>*</FNR><FN>The present paper is a further development of the groundwork in Brier (1996, 1997, 1998 and 1999a). </FN>.

41. Chemistry Journals: The Transition From Paper to Electronic With Lessons for Other Disciplines.

43. Dimensions and uncertainties of author citation rankings: Lessons learned from frequency-weighted in-text citation counting.

44. Collaboration in computer science: A network science approach.

45. The beginnings of a new era: time to reflect on 17 years of the ISJ.

46. Citation rates and perceptions of scientific contribution.

47. Operationalizing places in GIScience: A review.

48. Group-Based Trajectory Modeling (GBTM) of Citations in Scholarly Literature: Dynamic Qualities of "Transient" and "Sticky Knowledge Claims".

49. A Fuzzy Set Characterization of Interaction in Scientific Research.

50. How artificial intelligence might change academic library work: Applying the competencies literature and the theory of the professions.