Bibliogram

A Bibliogramm is a graphical or tabular arrangement of objects that are shown as a ranking by the number of occurrences in connection with an initial term. The term " bibliogram " was proposed in 2005 by Howard D. White for several such probability distributions and diagrams that are frequently encountered in the informetrics, scientometrics and bibliometrics. Mostly it involves power-law distributions or other scaling laws such as the Zipf law or Bradford's law. While the statistical distribution function are extensively studied scientifically, but in practice are often the actual rankings of interest.

Analogous to Bibliogrammen White suggests you note identified by informal or bibliometric analyzes orders of terms that frequently occur in conjunction with another term output, as associogram ( " associagram "). Assoziogramme can help for example in the topic and word-finding or creating a thesaurus.

Examples

An example of a Bibliogramm in bibliometrics is a list of the co-authors of an author with the number of their joint scientific publications, or the authors of a journal with the number of their published articles therein.

A popular example of a Bibliogramm are lists of recommendations for books ( " authors who have bought this book ...") from Amazon.

An example of the application of Assoziogrammen is Google Sets, but it is not about Bibliogramme in the true sense.

Pictures of Bibliogram

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