Abstract

Watch the VIDEO here. Presenter - Susanne Mikki.PurposeBased on the scholarly output in Norway, we aim to determine the total amount of articles freely available online, and prove whether there exists a citation advantage for these. We also investigate whether these articles receive more mentions on social platforms such as tweets or blogposts.DesignThe total scholarly publication output of Norway is indexed in CERES, the Current Information System in Norway. Based on these publication data, we searched a) Google Scholar and denoted a document as freely available, when a link to a full-text was provided, and b) altmetric.com to detect mentions of these articles. We analyzed the extracted data by publishing year, citations, availability, provider and mentions on different platforms.FindingsDependent on subject field, we find that almost 70 % of all articles are freely available. Articles behind paywalls belong to the most prestigious publishers such as Elsevier, Springer, Routledge and Universitetsforlaget (the main Norwegian academic publisher). According to Google Scholar’s link resolver, ResearchGate and academia.edu are the most frequent providers. In addition, institutional repositories seem to play a major role in posting free article versions.We find a clear advantage for open publishing; on average, these documents received almost 30 % more mentions on social media platforms and twice as many citations, indicating that open access is the future in publishing.

Highlights

  • We know that About 20% of all Norwegian articles are gold OA According to GS link resolver – Our case study on climate* showed that 74% of articles are open – Similar studies recently report an open share of 60-70% Open publications are more often cited than paywalled publicationsResearch questions1

  • Citation index normalized by field and year

  • Open articles are cited more than 10% above average

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Summary

Introduction

About 20% of all Norwegian articles are gold OA According to GS link resolver – Our case study on climate* showed that 74% of articles are open – Similar studies recently report an open share of 60-70% Open publications are more often cited than paywalled publications A Case study on climate and society. 1. What is the open-share of all Norwegian articles according to GS link resolver and according to oaDOI? 2. Can the citation advantage for open articles been proved for the total article output of Norway?

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