Howard D. White

Howard D. White (born June 15, 1936 in Salt Lake City, Utah) is a scientist in library and information science with a focus on informetrics and scientometrics.

He has published on bibliometrics and co-citation analysis, evaluation of reference services, expert systems for reference work, innovative online searching, social science data archives, library publicity, American attitudes toward library censorship, and literature retrieval for meta-analysis and interdisciplinary studies.[1]

After taking his Ph.D in librarianship at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1974, White joined the Drexel University College of Information Science and Technology, where he is now professor emeritus.[2]

Awards

In 1993, he won the Research Award of the American Society for Information Science and Technology (ASIST) for distinguished contributions in his field. In 1998, he and Katherine McCain won the best JASIS paper award for "Visualizing a Discipline: An Author Co-Citation Analysis of Information Science, 1972-1995".

He was a Drexel Distinguished Professor for 19982002, using the grant awarded to develop the AuthorMap system. In 2004, he won ASIST’s highest honor for career achievement, the Award of Merit. In 2005, the International Society for Scientometrics and Informetrics honored him with the biennial Derek de Solla Price Memorial Medal for contributions to the quantitative study of science.

gollark: There are lots of factors which could make it go either way. I don't really know how to balance them.
gollark: It says so when I mouseover it.
gollark: > as shitty as lying is i think i can understand why they did thatI can't agree with governments lying to people in basically any circumstance. They're granted governmenty powers, and *need* to actually be accountable and transparent.
gollark: Pretending problems don't exist is a time-honoured strategy which has never caused issues.
gollark: There are a bunch of different angles being tried for vaccines, which is good.

References

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