Abstract

Does the rise of open access journals change the way researchers collaborate? Specifically, since publishing in open access journals requires a publication fee, does income affect how researchers form international collaborations? To answer this question, we create a new data set by scraping bibliographic data from Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI) journals. Using the four income group classifications from the World Bank Analytical Classifications, we find that researchers from low-income nations are more likely to form international collaborations than researchers from wealthier nations. This result is verified to be significant using a series of pairwise Kolmogorov–Smirnov tests. We then study which nations most frequently form international collaborations with other nations and find that the USA, China, Germany, and France are the most preferred nations for forming international collaborations. While most nations prefer to form international collaborations with high-income nations, some exceptions exist, where a nation most often forms international collaborations with a nearby nation that is either an upper-middle-income or lower-middle-income nation. We further this analysis by showing that these results are apparent across the six different research categories established in the Frascati Manual. Finally, trends in publications in MDPI journals mirror trends seen in all journals, such as the continued increase in the percentage of published papers involving international collaboration.

Highlights

  • Open access journals offer authors greater visibility for their work in exchange for a fee.This deviation from the traditional, subscription-based model of academic publishing affects authors in a heterogeneous manner

  • To help clarify the magnitude of contributions from each income group, we provide in Table 2 the collective population, total number of papers published in Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI), and a per capita measure of MDPI publications by income group using 2018 population data from [39]

  • We found that low-income nations form collaborations more frequently than other nations, and that this difference is statistically significant at the 5% level and is robust to the removal of papers with authors from more than 20 different nations

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Summary

Introduction

Open access journals offer authors greater visibility for their work in exchange for a fee. This data set allows for the identification of instances of specific international collaborations between scholars from different countries. This data set is available for free online along with all of the code used to create this data set in the “2018_Initial” directory within the repository https://github.com/cat-astrophic/MDPI Using these data, we provide evidence that researchers from low-income nations form international collaborations more frequently than researchers from wealthier nations. Most nations prefer to form international collaborations with high-income nations These results provide evidence that the financial barrier to publishing in open access journals does contribute to the process of publishing scholarly research

Literature Review
Data Collection Process
Income and International Collaboration
International Collaboration Within Disciples
Findings
Conclusions and Future Directions
Full Text
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