Correlation between article download and citation figures for highly accessed articles from five open access oncology journals
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/6024Date
2013Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Different approaches can be chosen to quantify the impact and merits of scientific oncology publications. These
include source of publication (including journal reputation and impact factor), whether or not articles are cited by
others, and access/download figures. When relying on citation counts, one needs to obtain access to citation
databases and has to consider that results differ from one database to another. Accumulation of citations takes
time and their dynamics might differ from journal to journal and topic to topic. Therefore, we wanted to evaluate
the correlation between citation and download figures, hypothesising that articles with fewer downloads also
accumulate fewer citations. Typically, publishers provide download figures together with the article. We extracted
and analysed the 50 most viewed articles from 5 different open access oncology journals. For each of the 5 journals
and also all journals combined, correlation between number of accesses and citations was limited (r = 0.01-0.30).
Considerable variations were also observed when analyses were restricted to specific article types such as reviews only
(r = 0.21) or case reports only (r = 0.53). Even if year of publication was taken into account, high correlation coefficients
were the exception from the rule. In conclusion, downloads are not a universal surrogate for citation figures.
Publisher
SpringerOpenCitation
SpringerPlus (2013), vol. 2:261Metadata
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