Global Research Productivity in Knowledge Management: an Analysis of Scopus Database
Abstract
The main objective of this study is to investigate and analyze global research productivity in knowledge
management (KM) research published from 1960 to 2017 and indexed in Scopus database. It is the first
scientometric study investigating and analyzing 56 years of KM literature indexed in Scopus. The study
used scientometric approach to identify and analyze bibliographic information of 63474 documents
retrieved, in August 2018, from Scopus database. KM research productivity has grown from a single digit in
1960 to four digits in 2003. The results of the study indicate that, for the past 20 years (1997-2017), KM
research recorded 63141 documents compared to 333 documents in 36 years (1960-1996), and the year
2009 emerged as the most productive year. China appeared leading the world in respect to the institutional
productivity and took the second position, after the USA, as the most productive country in KM research.
Findings of the study showed conference proceedings leading the types of publications followed by the
journals, and book series. The “Journal of Knowledge Management” leadsthe top 10 journals in the number
of publications, while the journal of “Expert Systems with Applications” top the list in the number of
citations. A total of 4134 unique contributors produced an average of 15.35 papers from 1960-2017; and
the top three authors are from Australia, USA, and Norway. Findings of the study could be a useful report
for knowledge workers, academic institutions, and government agencies who are interested in improving
KM projects and scientific research.
Author
Kaba, Abdoulaye
Ramaiah, Chennupati K.