Abstract

BackgroundOne of the disadvantages of the Impact Factor (IF) is self-citation. The SCImago Journal Rank (SJR) indicator excludes self-citations and considers the quality, rather than absolute numbers, of citations of a journal by other journals. The present study re-evaluated the influence of self-citation on the 2007 IF for 18 major orthopaedic journals and investigated the difference in ranking between IF and SJR.MethodsThe journals were analysed for self-citation both overall and divided into a general group (n = 8) and a specialized group (n = 10). Self-cited and self-citing rates, as well as citation densities and IFs corrected for self-citation (cIF), were calculated. The rankings of the 18 journals by IF and by SJR were compared and the absolute difference between these rankings (ΔR) was determined.ResultsSpecialized journals had higher self-citing rates (p = 0.01, Δmedian = 9.50, 95%CI -19.42 to 0.42), higher self-cited rates (p = 0.0004, Δmedian = -10.50, 95%CI -15.28 to -5.72) and greater differences between IF and cIF (p = 0.003, Δmedian = 3.50, 95%CI -6.1 to 13.1). There was no significant correlation between self-citing rate and IF for both groups (general: r = 0.46, p = 0.27; specialized: r = 0.21, p = 0.56). When the difference in ranking between IF and SJR was compared between both groups, sub-specialist journals were ranked lower compared to their general counterparts (ΔR: p = 0.006, Δmedian = 2.0, 95%CI -0.39 to 4.39).ConclusionsCitation analysis shows that specialized orthopaedic journals have specific self-citation tendencies. The correlation between self-cited rate and IF in our sample was large but, due to small sample size, not significant. The SJR excludes self-citations in its calculation and therefore enhances the underestimation in ranking of specialized journals.

Highlights

  • One of the disadvantages of the Impact Factor (IF) is self-citation

  • The specialized orthopaedic journals included in the study were: American Journal of Sports Medicine (AJSM), Arthroscopy, European Spine Journal (ESJ), Foot and Ankle International (FAI), Journal of Arthroplasty (JOA), Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma (JOT), Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics (JPO), Journal of shoulder and elbow surgery (JSES), Knee surgery sports traumatology arthroscopy (KSSTA) and Spine

  • Self-citation rates The journals with the highest self-citing rates were Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research (CORR) in the general group (15%) and Spine in the specialized group (29%) (Table 1); the lowest rates were for BMC Musculoskeleletal Disorders (BMC MD)/OCNA and KSSTA/ESJ

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Summary

Introduction

The SCImago Journal Rank (SJR) indicator excludes self-citations and considers the quality, rather than absolute numbers, of citations of a journal by other journals. A major problem with the IF for journals is self-citation, defined in Journal Citation Reports as referring to articles from the same journal [1]. Due to these limitations and the simplicity of calculating the IF, it would be relatively easy for editors. Falagas et al [5] recently described the application of a PageRank algorithm to the Scopus database to produce the SCImago Journal Rank (SJR) indicator. The SJR has several other benefits [5], such as the greater number of journals and languages included in its database and the fact that it is open-source software (free of charge)

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