论文标题
资金对开放访问引用优势的影响
The influence of funding on the Open Access citation advantage
论文作者
论文摘要
开放访问中的一些引用优势可能是由于更多的访问可以使更多的人阅读,因此引用了他们原本不会的文章。但是,很难建立因果关系,并且存在许多可能的偏见。几个因素可以影响观察到的引文率差异。筹款人的任务可以是其中之一。资助者可能有OA的要求,并且资金丰富的研究比资金差的研究更有可能获得更多的引用。在本文中,该假设进行了检验。因此,我们研究了资金对出版方式的影响以及超过1.28,000种研究文章中收到的引用,其中31%获得了资助。这些研究文章来自2016年的40个随机选择的主题类别,在Scopus数据库中从2016 - 2020年期间收到的引用。我们发现在混合期刊上发表的开放文章比开放访问期刊的文章更为重要。因此,混合金模式下的文章平均是黄金模态的两倍。无论资金如何,情况都是这种情况,因此这一证据很强。此外,在同一出版方式中,我们发现资助的文章通常比无资金的文章获得50%的引用。引用最多的方式是混合黄金,最少被引用的是黄金,甚至低于付费墙。此外,开放访问存储库的使用大大增加了收到的引用,尤其是对于没有资金的文章而言。因此,开放访问存储库中的文章(绿色)比付费墙的文章高出50%。这些证据是显着的,不依赖资金。除了黄金模式外,超过75%的案例具有引用优势,并且在无资金的文章中相当大。随着时间的流逝,这个结果既有很强了。
Some of the citation advantage in open access is likely due to more access allows more people to read and hence cite articles they otherwise would not. However, causation is difficult to establish and there are many possible bias. Several factors can affect the observed differences in citation rates. Funder mandates can be one of them. Funders are likely to have OA requirement, and well-funded studies are more likely to receive more citations than poorly funded studies. In this paper this hypothesis is tested. Thus, we studied the effect of funding on the publication modality and the citations received in more than 128 thousand research articles, of which 31% were funded. These research articles come from 40 randomly selected subject categories in the year 2016, and the citations received from the period 2016-2020 in the Scopus database. We found open articles published in hybrid journals were considerably more cited than those in open access journals. Thus, articles under the hybrid gold modality are cite on average twice as those in the gold modality. This is the case regardless of funding, so this evidence is strong. Moreover, within the same publication modality, we found that funded articles generally obtain 50% more citations than unfunded ones. The most cited modality is the hybrid gold and the least cited is the gold, well below even the paywalled. Furthermore, the use of open access repositories considerably increases the citations received, especially for those articles without funding. Thus, the articles in open access repositories (green) are 50% more cited than the paywalled ones. This evidence is remarkable and does not depend on funding. Excluding the gold modality, there is a citation advantage in more than 75% of the cases and it is considerably greater among unfunded articles. This result is strong both across fields and over time.