VOSviewer: Learn to use VOSviewer (Beginner Tutorial) 👌
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- Опубліковано 20 лип 2024
- In this quick tutorial, I show how simple it is to use VOSviewer free software for bibliometric analysis, such as clustering.
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VOSviewer is developed by the Centre for Science and Technology Studies at Leiden University. It is used to construct and visualize bibliometric networks, which can include journals, researchers, or individual publications. These networks can be constructed based on citation, bibliographic coupling, co-citation, co-occurrence, or co-authorship relations. In this tutorial, I demonstrate keyword co-occurrence using data exported from the Web of Science academic database.
Want to load multiple files into VOSviewer? See the tutorial at • VOSviewer: How to Load...
VOSviewer may be downloaded at www.vosviewer.com/download
#VOSviewer #research #university #tutorial
Literally the best short tutorial for beginners. Thanky ou
Glad it helped👍
Thank you, it's quite useful.
Glad it helped 👍
Of course a good tutorial for research analysis.
soooo cool! Thank you!
No problem 👍
Many thanks for your presentation
Glad it helped 👍
Thank you for the presentation
No problem at all 😃
Hi thanks for the tutorial! I met a very naive question: I wanted to export my data from VOSviwer to the excel file. However, I could not see those options when I click mouse. There is no reaction when I click mouse before visualize the map. I was wondering if you have any ideas about this bug or if you have any solutions I could try? Thanks very much!
I haven't seen this issue previously :( Sorry I can't help.
Hi Gary. Besides Bibliometrix and VOSviewer, what other software I can use to run a bibliometric analysis?
PyBibx is also worth trying pypi.org/project/pyBibX/
@@GaryEckstein Thank you! I’d love to see your video tutorial using this software.
Thanks for sharing these important steps to the analysis processe. I tried to follow you, but I have one doubt:
Where can I find the file “savedrecs.txt”? (2'58") - Thanks in advance.
That file will be the file you exported from e.g
Scopus or Web of Science