Gauging your publishing impact
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Transcript Gauging your publishing impact
Get Cited or Perish:
The h-index & Researcher
Incentives for Open Access
A. Ben Wagner, Sciences Librarian
University at Buffalo
The OA Message to Researchers
Used to be Publish or Perish.
Now it’s increasingly Get Cited or Perish.
Open Access: more readers, more
citations, more impact
It’s your work; retain a few rights, at least
posting manuscript to repository.
Sure you publish for prestige, but you also
publish to be read!
The Classic Journal Impact Factor
2005-2006
Child Abuse &
Neglect (journal)
158 articles
238 Cites
2007
All scholarly
articles in
journals covered
by SSCI
2007 Impact = 238 2007 cites
= 1.506
Factor
158 2005-06 articles
So what?
JIF is a measure of extreme currency – 2
year window.
JIF is a GROSS average. Average article
in Nano Letters cited 10.371 times,
But the citation RANGE = 0 - 319 times
(14 articles cited zero times!).
Never ever intended to measure quality of
an individual article or author, even
Thomson Scientific says that.
A Better Citation Metric
h-Index (Hirsch Index)
An h-Index of 11 means a person (or
dept.) has 11 articles cited at least 11
times.
Easily calculated from Web of Science
http://library.buffalo.edu/libraries/eresources/webofscience.html
Critique of h-index
Rewards longevity, but not leastpublishable-unit or sheer quantity.
Recent and old work rewarded equally
Does not reward highly cited papers
Many variants (g-index, m-index, etc.
proposed to weight age, recent work, &
highly cited papers, # of coauthors)
Relatively insensitive to manipulation.
Variants of h-index
g-index = g number of papers that
received g2 citations (rewards highly cited
papers
m-index = h-index / no. of years a
researcher has published (normalizes for
longevity)
Citation Indexes – Many more players – 1
SciFinder
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Google Scholar/Harzing’s POP
Amazon (Search inside this book)
Scitation/Spin Web/PROLA
Citation Bridge (US Patents)
USPTO
Optics InfoBase
Citation Indexes – Many more players - 2
CiteSeer (primarily computer & info sci)
ScienceDirect
PsycInfo
IEEE Xplore
Spires (High Energy Physics)
IOP Journals
CrossRef
My Take
For an individual or department:
h-index plus
Total cites to all published articles plus
Citation Report graphs from appropriate the
citation databases (SCI, SSCI, AHCI,+?)
Give a pretty good take on the impact of
one’s journal articles within the limits of
available citation data.
Demonstrably superior to JIF
A Free, New Citation Tool
Harzing’s Publish or Perish
Install from:
http://www.harzing.com/pop.htm
Automatically analyzes citations from
Google Scholar for any author.
Instructive to compare Web of Science
citation report with Harzing’s report.
Warning: Dirty data, don’t take at face
value.
Harzing’s POP Statistics
Total number of papers & citations
Ave. number of citations per paper & per author
Ave. number of papers per author & per year
Hirsch's h-index and related parameters
Egghe's g-index
Other variations on the h-index
Age-weighted citation rate
Number of authors per paper
Primer on Open Access (OA)
OA simply means free-to-read.
OA is fully compatible with rigorous peer
review.
OA does not necessarily mean author-pay
(there are many models being tested).
OA journals can be low or high quality, just
like subscription journals.
Can OA have Prestige?
PLOS Biology
JIF=13.5 (7th out of 263 biochem journals)
Started in October 2003
PLOS One (in 2010 will be the largest
science journal in the world) – est. 8,000
articles
OA – a flash in the pan?
More than 4,000 fully OA, peer reviewed
journals - 2 new titles per day
1,500 OA repositories - new repository
every day.
Scientific Commons – 30 million OA items.
http://www.scientificcommons.org/
20% medical lit avail. Free within 2 years
Over 100 OA publication mandates
SO WHAT!
We publish for prestige, but we also
publish to be read & cited.
What if I point you to actual research that
shows OA articles are cited 25-250% more
than toll access (TA) articles?
http://www.buffalo.edu/~abwagner/OACiteImpactBibliogr
aphy.doc
A Couple of OA Cite Advantage Studies
(OA-CA = citations to OA vs. TA articles)
44% OA-CA in Ecology
(Norris & Rowland, 2008) The citation advantage of
open-access articles. JASIST, 59(12), 1963-1972.
OA-CA: Math (91%); Elec. Engineering
(51%); Philosophy (45%)
(Antelman 2004) Do open-access articles have a
greater research impact? College & Research
Libraries. 65(5): p. 372-382.
What you should know about OA
Know what your OA options are.
www.doaj.org
OA journal not the whole story
Most non-OA journals allow authors to
deposit their articles in an IR/DR.
See http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/ for
publisher policies.
More on Institutional Repositories
You have rights! Retain right to mount your
hard work to an IR/DR.
Done right it will be visible to Google
Scholar, OAIster, & other OAI harvestors.
Wide variety of formats & document types
The OA Advantage
As scholar, enlarge your audience/impact.
As reader, enjoy free online access to the
literature.
As teacher, your students have free,
liability-free access (fair use, course pack).
Moving away from an unsustainable
journal publishing system.
Personal Story
Journal of Chemical Information and
Modeling Article
Check out:
Open the channels of communication in your
field.
http://www.arl.org/sparc/bm~doc/OpenAccess.pdf
Create Change (SPARC)
http://www.createchange.org/
Making Change Work for You
Practical steps as faculty, researcher, reviewer,
editor, society member, teacher.
http://www.createchange.org/change/index.shtml
From Opportunity Assessment Instrument
ACRL Scholarly Communication Toolkit:
http://www.acrl.ala.org/scholcomm/
“10 Things You Should Know About Scholarly Communication”
http://www.acrl.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/issues/scholcomm/docs/SC%
20101%2010%20Things%20You.pdf.
“Open Access Overview” (Peter Suber):
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/overview.htm
Open Access Scholarly Information Sourcebook: Practical Steps for
Implementing Open Access: http://www.openoasis.org/
“Transforming Scholarly Communication and Publishing” (UB
Libraries – for faculty and students):
http://library.buffalo.edu/scholarly/index.php.
ScholCom Staff Wiki (UB Libraries – internal):
http://libweb1.lib.buffalo.edu/aslstaff/sc/
6 Things Researchers Need to Know about OA – P. Suber
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/newsletter/02-02-06.htm