Latest Activity

Litesh kumar sahu updated their profile
13 hours ago
Dr. Pramod kumar updated their profile
15 hours ago
Arun kumar Sirla updated their profile
21 hours ago
A Raghuveer Kumar joined Dr. Badan Barman's group
Wednesday
AREPALLI MADHAVI posted a status
"Dear Professional Collogues,I need the APSET 2026 question paper along with the answer key.Thanking you"
Wednesday
Arun Thilak S updated their profile
Jun 2
Rohit Kumar updated their profile
May 28
Konala Sangeeth shared a profile on Facebook
May 27
Anil Singh Yadav and Krishna kumar yadav are now friends
May 27
sukham romen singh left a comment for Khundrakpam Premoda Devi
May 27
Prakhar Dixit updated their profile
May 26
Mr. K. Kanipriyan and Kannan G are now friends
May 26
Rohan Gupta updated their profile
May 26
Profile IconN.KAPILESH, Bhamare Rhishikesh Suresh, piyush dhekale and 26 more joined LIS Links
May 25
Madhu E S posted a blog post
May 25
Shompa Das (Chaudhury) posted a blog post
May 25
Shaheen Momin posted a discussion
May 25
MD KAIYUM SHAIKH posted an event

International Conference on “Transforming Libraries through AI for a Smarter Knowledge Future” (ICTL–2026) at Kalinga University, Naya Raipur, Mode: Hybrid (Online & Offline)

June 19, 2026 at 9am to June 20, 2026 at 5pm
May 25
Nagappa Veerappa Bakkannanavar posted an event
May 25
Dr. SUDHI S VIJAYAN posted a discussion
May 25

Objective and use.

Views: 448

Reply to This

Replies to This Forum

Bradford's Law serves as a general guideline to librarians in determining the number of core journals in any given field. It states that journals in a single field can be divided into three parts, each containing the same number of articles: 1) a core of journals on the subject, relatively few in number, that produces approximately one-third of all the articles, 2) a second zone, containing the same number of articles as the first, but a greater number of journals, and 3) a third zone, containing the same number of articles as the second, but a still greater number of journals. The mathematical relationship of the number of journals in the core to the first zone is a constant n and to the second zone the relationship is n². Bradford expressed this relationship as 1:n:n². Bradford formulated his law after studying a bibliography of geophysics, covering 326 journals in the field. He discovered that 9 journals contained 429 articles, 59 contained 499 articles, and 258 contained 404 articles. So it took 9 journals to contribute one-third of the articles, 5 times 9, or 45, to produce the next third, and 5 times 5 times 9, or 225, to produce the last third. As may be seen, Bradford's Law is not statistically accurate, strictly speaking. But it is still commonly used as a general rule of thumb (Potter 1988).
Please find the attached link. It may be useful for you
Attachments:

Dear Jaison,

I dont know why you post such type of topic for discussion. You can make a search over Google or Wikipedia and get the answer of these types of questions. So is there any need of posting such type of topics for discussion over LIS Links forum? I am waiting for your response.

 

One more thing. In discussion, you mostly use UPPER CASE letter and everytime I have to convert it to sentence case. Please try to avoid the use of UPPER CASE in the title as well as in the main content of the discussion forum.

RSS

© 2026   Created by Dr. Badan Barman.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

LIS Links whatsApp