Scientific publications are not limited to journal articles. They include various formats, and each of them plays its own role in academia. Understanding their details is important when writing your own research, and also when assessing scholarly outputs, searching for information, or preparing a publication.
Peer-reviewed and non-peer-reviewed publications: what is considered as "scientific"?
What do the databases show?
Remember that the extent and the quality of indexing significantly varies depending on the publication types in scientific citation databases. Web of Science and Scopus primarily cover peer-reviewed journal articles and conference proceedings, however, poorly index monographs, books, book chapters, and datasets. Google Scholar offers a broader coverage, including preprints and other open-access materials, however, applies less rigorous criteria for source selection.
Main types of peer-reviewed publications
New Format: Datasets – When Data Becomes Publication
Where are Datasets published?
Why is this important to know?