Abstract

The present study aimed to analyze and visualize the science map of Cochrane systematic reviews (CSRs) with high Altmetric attention score (AAS). On 2020-07-29, the altmetric data of the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews were obtained from the Altmetric database (Altmetric LLP, London, UK). Bibliometric data of the top 5% AAS of CSRs were extracted from the Web of Science. Keyword co-occurrence, co-authorship and co-citation network analyses were then employed using VOSviewer software. The random forest model was used to rank the importance of the altmetric resource. A total of 11222 CSRs with AAS were found (Total mentions: 305265), with Twitter being the most popular Altmetric resource. Consequently, the top 5% AAS (649 articles, mean AAS: 204.95, 95% confidence level: 18.95, mean citations: 123.68, 95% confidence level: 13.9) were included. Density mapping revealed female, adult and child as the most popular author keywords. According to network visualization, Helen V. Worthington (University of Manchester, Manchester, UK), the University of Oxford and UK had the greatest impact on the network at the author, organization and country levels respectively. AAS were weekly correlated with citations (rs=0.21) although citations were moderately correlated with policy document and blog mentions (rs=0.46 and rs=0.43). Cochrane systematic reviews received high levels of online attention, particularly in the Twittersphere and mostly from the UK. However, CSRs were rarely publicized and discussed using recently developed academic tools, such as F1000 prime, Publons and PubPeer.

Highlights

  • Cochrane is a British charity founded by Iain Chalmers in 1993

  • The bibliometric data of the top 5% Cochrane systematic reviews (CSRs) with the highest Altmetric attention score (AAS) were extracted from the Web of Science using their DOI

  • The co-citation network analysis revealed that the Lancet and CDSRs had the greatest influence on the network (Figure 6)

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Summary

Introduction

The organization was created to manage medical research findings in order to facilitate the evidencebased choices in health interventions faced by health professionals, patients, health policymakers, as well as those interested in health to make informed decisions about health promotion. Cochrane includes 53 review groups from 130 countries.[1]. Alternative metrics, abbreviated to altmetrics, is an emerging academic tool that measures the online attention surrounding scientific research outputs.[2,3,4] It complements, but does not replace, the traditional citation-based metrics.[5] Altmetric data resources include Twitter, Facebook (mentions on public pages only), Google+, Wikipedia, news stories, scientific blogs, policy documents, patents, post-publication peer reviews (Faculty of 1,000 Prime, PubPeer), Weibo, Reddit, Pinterest, YouTube, online reference managers (Mendeley and CiteULike) and sites running Stack Exchange (Q&A).[6] In comparison with traditional citation-based metrics, altmetric data resources are updated rapidly. Journal of Scientometric Research, Vol 9, Issue 3, Sep-Dec 2020

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