Evolution of number of citations per article in Materials Science: possible causes and effect on the impact factor of journals

被引:0
作者
Ana M. Ariza-Guerrero
J. Sebastián Blázquez
机构
[1] Universidad de Sevilla,Biblioteca de La Universidad de Sevilla
[2] Universidad de Sevilla,Dpto. Física de La Materia Condensada
来源
Scientometrics | 2023年 / 128卷
关键词
Citations; Materials Science; Bibliometrics; Web of science database; Journal citation reports;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
An overall rise in the citation parameters used in the metrics of scientific publications (i.e. journal impact factor, JIF) has taken place since the last decade of the previous century, coinciding with the electronic distribution of (and access to) scientific literature. This inflation like tendency is herein analyzed in the area of Materials Science and also affects the number of publications. Considering average JIF values, its growth is proportional to the number of publications in the area and to its JIF value, leading to an inhomogeneous boost that preferentially benefits those journals with high JIF. An elevation in the number of publications per year alone cannot explain this behavior but it occurs due to a continuous and widespread increment in the number of citations per article, which only remains limited when restrictions are applied by journals to the maximum number of pages per article. In this work we observe this positive correlation between the increase in the number of references per article and the overall increase in JIF but, in our analysis, a kink point is observed in consistency with the appearance of online databases, particularly those free available in 2004. Online databases along with the widespread of open access publishing option made the research content easily available to the scientific community contributing to an increasing trend (without apparent saturation) in the number of articles used to contextualize the new scientific contributions.
引用
收藏
页码:6589 / 6609
页数:20
相关论文
共 111 条
[1]  
Althouse BM(2009)Differences in impact factor across fields and over time Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 60 27-34
[2]  
West JD(2022)Impact factors, altmetrics, and prestige, oh my: The relationship between perceived prestige and objective measures of journal quality Innovative Higher Education 47 947-966
[3]  
Bergstrom T(1994)IPCT journal: A case study of an electronic journal on the internet Journal of the American Society for Information Science 45 771-776
[4]  
Bergstrom CT(2010)Is scientific literature subject to a ‘sell-by-date’? A general methodology to analyze the ‘durability’ of scientific documents Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 61 329-339
[5]  
Bray NJ(2020)Is the emerging source citation index an aid to assess the citation impact in social science and humanities? Journal of Informetrics 14 101088-1064
[6]  
Major CH(2013)Determinants of research citation impact in nanoscience and nanotechnology Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 64 1055-873
[7]  
Collins MP(2013)Which factors help authors produce the highest impact research? Collaboration, journal and document properties Journal of Informetrics 7 861-672
[8]  
Berge ZL(2013)Comparing journals from different fields of science and social science through a JCR subject categories normalized impact factor Scientometrics 95 645-2644
[9]  
Costas R(2020)Open access effect on uncitedness: A large-scale study controlling by discipline, source type and visibility Scientometrics 124 2619-14
[10]  
van Leeuwen TN(2022)Progressive and degenerative journals: On the growth and appraisal of knowledge in scholarly publishing European Journal for Philosophy of Science 12 61-5331