Which Domains Do Open-Access Journals Do Best In? A 5-Year Longitudinal Study

被引:12
|
作者
Yan, Erjia [1 ]
Li, Kai [1 ]
机构
[1] Drexel Univ, Coll Comp & Informat, 3141 Chestnut St, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
关键词
DISCIPLINARY KNOWLEDGE; IMPACT FACTOR; SCIENCE; INDICATORS; DIFFUSION; CITATIONS;
D O I
10.1002/asi.24002
中图分类号
TP [自动化技术、计算机技术];
学科分类号
0812 ;
摘要
Although researchers have begun to investigate the difference in scientific impact between closed-access and open-access journals, studies that focus specifically on dynamic and disciplinary differences remain scarce. This study serves to fill this gap by using a large longitudinal dataset to examine these differences. Using CiteScore as a proxy for journal scientific impact, we employ a series of statistical tests to identify the quartile categories and disciplinary areas in which impact trends differ notably between closed-and open-access journals. We find that closed-access journals have a noticeable advantage in social sciences (for example, business and economics), whereas open-access journals perform well in medical and healthcare domains (for example, health profession and nursing). Moreover, we find that after controlling for a journal's rank and disciplinary differences, there are statistically more closed-access journals in the top 10%, Quartile 1, and Quartile 2 categories asmeasured by CiteScore; in contrast, more open-access journals in Quartile 4 gained scientific impact from 2011 to 2015. Considering dynamic and disciplinary trends in tandem, we find that more closed-access journals in Social Sciences gained in impact, whereas in biochemistry and medicine, more open-access journals experienced such gains.
引用
收藏
页码:844 / 856
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Practitioners of pediatric emergency medicine: A 5-year longitudinal study
    Chande, VT
    Krug, SE
    PEDIATRIC EMERGENCY CARE, 2001, 17 (04) : 237 - 239
  • [42] DEPRESSION AND CYSTIC FIBROSIS: RESULTS OF A 5-YEAR LONGITUDINAL STUDY
    Smith, B.
    Goetz, D. M.
    Frederick, C. A.
    Roach, C.
    Cogswell, A.
    PEDIATRIC PULMONOLOGY, 2018, 53 : 429 - 429
  • [43] Course of neuropsychiatric symptoms in dementia: 5-year longitudinal study
    Vik-Mo, Audun Osland
    Giil, Lasse Melvaer
    Ballard, Clive
    Aarsland, Dag
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY, 2018, 33 (10) : 1361 - 1369
  • [44] EVALUATION OF A HEARING CONSERVATION PROGRAM - 5-YEAR LONGITUDINAL STUDY
    PELL, S
    AMERICAN INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE ASSOCIATION JOURNAL, 1973, 34 (02): : 82 - 91
  • [45] EVALUATION OF A HEARING CONSERVATION PROGRAM - 5-YEAR LONGITUDINAL STUDY
    PELL, S
    AMERICAN INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE ASSOCIATION JOURNAL, 1972, 33 (02): : 31 - &
  • [46] Hippocampal volume change in schizophrenia: A 5-year longitudinal study
    van Haren, N. E.
    Hulshoff Pol, H. E.
    Cahn, W.
    Schnack, H. G.
    Janssen, J.
    Koolschijn, P. C.
    Klumpers, F.
    Kahn, R. S.
    SCHIZOPHRENIA BULLETIN, 2007, 33 (02) : 358 - 359
  • [47] STUTTERING IN CHILDHOOD - A 5-YEAR LONGITUDINAL-STUDY IN PROGRESS
    JOHANNSEN, HS
    SCHULZE, H
    ROMMEL, D
    HAGE, A
    FOLIA PHONIATRICA ET LOGOPAEDICA, 1994, 46 (05) : 241 - 249
  • [48] REPORT ON 5-YEAR LONGITUDINAL-STUDY SUPPORTED BY THE SSRC
    BRADLEY, L
    BRYANT, P
    BULLETIN OF THE BRITISH PSYCHOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 1983, 36 (FEB): : A25 - A25
  • [49] Do leptin levels predict weight gain? A 5-year follow-up study in Mauritius
    Hodge, AM
    de Courten, MP
    Dowse, GK
    Zimmet, PZ
    Collier, GR
    Gareeboo, H
    Chitson, P
    Fareed, D
    Hemraj, F
    Alberti, KGMM
    Tuomilehto, J
    OBESITY RESEARCH, 1998, 6 (05): : 319 - 325
  • [50] Do submissions entitled to an auto-waiver take more time to be accepted by open access journals?
    Uddin R.
    BMC Research Notes, 7 (1)