S. Arunachalam, Is Indian science an island by itself? Seminar on Primary Communication inScience & Technology in India, DRTC, Bangalore, 4-8 December 1978, Proc., to appear.
2.
S. Arunachalam , Scientific journals in India: their relevance to international science, Science Today, (March 1979) 45-50.
3.
Y.M. Rabkin and H. Inhaber, Science on the periphery: a citation study of three less developed countries. Scientometrics1(3) ( 1979) 261-274.
4.
M.J. Moravcsik and J.M. Ziman, Paradisia and Dominatia: science and the developing world, Foreign Affairs53(4) (July 1975) 699-724.
5.
A. Ratnakar , Scientific and Technical Journals Received by Air Mail in Bangalore Libraries (Raman Research Institute Library, Bangalore, 1980).
6.
H. Inhaber , Canadian scientific journals: part I - coverage , J. Amer. Soc. Info. Sci.26(4) (1975) 253-258.
7.
H. Inhaber , Canadian scientific journals: part II - interactions , J. Amer. Soc. Info. Sci.26(5) (1975) 290-293.
8.
C.T. Bishop , Canadian journals are better than some think , Science Forum10(3) (June 1977) 20-22.
9.
B.J. Walby , Australian journals of scientific research , Nature261 ( 1976) 661-664.
10.
E. Garfield , Journal citation studies 32; Canadian journals, Part 1 - what they cited and what cites them, Current Contents19(33) (August 13, 1979) 5-9.
11.
E. Garfield , Journal citation studies 32; Canadian journals, Part 2 - analysis of Canadian research published at home and abroad, Current Contents19(34) (August 20, 1979) 5-9.
12.
E. Garfield , Journal citation studies 27; Australian and New Zealand citers and citees, Essays of an Information Scientist (ISI Press, Philadelphia, 1977), Vol. 2, pp. 584-589.
13.
E. Garfield , Highly cited articles 28; Articles from Australia and New Zealand journals, Essays of an Information Scientist ( ISI Press, Philadelphia, 1977), Vol. 2, pp. 593-598.
14.
E. Garfield , Citation Indexing - Its Theory and Application in Science, Technology and Humanities (Wiley, New York, 1979).
15.
Mary Livingston , Executive secretary, Institute for Scientific Information, Philadelphia, Personal communication, 15 August 1980. 1
16.
CAS Today: Facts and Figures about Chemical Abstracts Service (American Chemical Society) 1980. (India's share of world's chemical literature rose from 2.6% in 1973 to 3.1% in 1979; in the same period Australian contribution rose marginally from 1.1% to 1.2% and Canada's share increased from 2.8% to 2.9%.)
17.
Nancy F. Hardy, Engineering index, Inc., Personal communication, June 1978.
18.
Robert Marchisotto , Bioscience Information Service, Philadelphia, Personal communication, July 10, 1978. (The 145 Indian journals covered in Biological Abstracts in the three years 1975-77 contributed 3913 entries out of a total of 425 028, which is much less than 1%. This, however, does not include papersd published by Indian scientists in foreign journals.)
19.
S. Arunachalam and S. Hirannaiah, Journal preference of Indian researchers in the physical and chemical sciences, Seminar on Primary Communication in Science & Technology in India, DRTC, Bangalore1978 , Proc., to appear.
20.
G. Holton , Models for understanding the growth of research . The Graduate Journal9 (Suppl.) (1973) 397-430.
21.
Research & Development Statistics, 1976-77. (Department of Science & Technology, Government of India, New Delhi.) See also OECD Observer (March 1980).
22.
Data obtained from the University Grants Commission of India , New Delhi.
23.
M.J. Moravcsik , P. Murugesan and E. Shearer, An analysis of citation patterns in Indian physics, Science & Culture42(6) (1976) 295-301.