Annual Review of Information Science and Technology explained

Annual Review of Information Science and Technology
Abbreviation:Annu. Rev. Inf. Sci. Technol.
Discipline:Information science
Editor:Lisa M. Given
Publisher:Wiley
History:1965–2011; 2021–present
Frequency:Annually
Impact:2.000
Impact-Year:2010
Issn:0066-4200
Eissn:1550-8382
Coden:ARISCB
Lccn:66025096
Oclc:01481502
Website:https://asistdl.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/15508382

The Annual Review of Information Science and Technology was relaunched by the Association for Information Science and Technology's Board of Directors in 2021, following a 10-year publishing hiatus. Previously, this annual review journal was published from 1966 to 2011 during which it was established in 1965 by the American Documentation Institute and the National Science Foundation, at the request of Helen Brownson.[1] It published review articles rather than empirical research articles. Its last (2010) impact factor was 2.000.[2] It was for 45 years "the main forum for scholarly review articles in information science."[3]

Publishers and editors

The current editor is Lisa M. Given, Professor of Information Sciences at RMIT University. The first editor-in-chief was Carlos Cuadra (System Development Corporation). It won the Best Information Science Book of the Year from the Association for Information Science and Technology in 1966.[4] From Vol. 11 (1976) - vol. 35 (2001) editor-in-chief was Martha E. Williams; from Vol. 36 (2002) to Volume 45 (2011) the editor was Blaise Cronin. The first publisher was Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.; since Vol. 26 (1991) it was published by Information Today, Inc. on behalf of American Society for Information Science and Technology.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Jayroe. Tina J.. 52018105. 2012. Homage to Helen Brownson: Information science pioneer. Proceedings of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. en. 49. 1. 4–1. 10.1002/meet.14504901264. free.
  2. 2010 JCR Social Science Edition in Journal Citation Reports
  3. Bawden, David (2010). Alas poor ARIST: reviewing the information sciences. Journal of Documentation, 66(5), 625–626.
  4. https://www.asist.org/programs-services/awards-honors/ Awards and Honors