Abstract

Background Citations of papers are positively influenced by the journal's impact factor (IF). For non-open access (non-OA) journals, this influence may be due to the fact that high-IF journals are more often purchased by libraries, and are therefore more often available to researchers, than low-IF journals. This positive influence has not, however, been shown specifically for papers published in open access (OA) journals, which are universally accessible, and do not need library purchase. It is therefore important to ascertain if the IF influences citations in OA journals too. Methods 203 randomized controlled trials (102 OA and 101 non-OA) published in January 2011 were included in the study. Five-year citations for papers published in OA journals were compared to those for non-OA journals. Source papers were derived from PubMed. Citations were retrieved from Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar databases. The Thompson-Reuter's IF was used. Results OA journals were found to have significantly more citations overall compared to non-OA journals (median 15.5 vs 12, p=0.039). The IF did not correlate with citations for OA journals (Spearman's rho =0.187, p=0.60). The increase in the citations with increasing IF was minimal for OA journals (beta coefficient = 3.346, 95% CI -0.464, 7.156, p=0.084). In contrast, the IF did show moderate correlation with citations for articles published in non-OA journals (Spearman's rho=0.514, p<0.001). The increase in the number of citations was also significant (beta coefficient = 4.347, 95% CI 2.42, 6.274, p<0.001). Conclusion It is better to publish in an OA journal for more citations. It may not be worth paying high publishing fees for higher IF journals, because there is minimal gain in terms of increased number of citations. On the other hand, if one wishes to publish in a non-OA journal, it is better to choose one with a high IF.

Highlights

  • A journal’s impact factor (IF) has long been used as a measure of the quality of a journal[1]

  • Citations for articles published in open access (OA) and non-OA journals 203 articles (101 non-OA, and 102 OA) fulfilled the criteria for inclusion

  • There was, significant correlation between citations and IF in non-OA publications, which showed a rise in five-year citations by 4.3 for every unit increase in IF (Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

A journal’s impact factor (IF) has long been used as a measure of the quality of a journal[1]. Scientists, wanting a greater audience for their research, preferred to publish in high IF journals. OA publication is associated with increased citations[14,15,16,17,18,19], so researchers are likely to prefer this path. What is not known is whether, within OA journals, increasing IF is associated with increasing citations, as it is for non-OA journals. This information is important, since cost of publishing in an open access journal is high and increases with the journal’s IF. A sponsor, pay good money for publication in a higher IF OA journal if the IF will not influence citations?. We conducted a study to determine whether an OA journal’s IF influences citations

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Strengths and limitations
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Garfield E
11. Vanclay JK
15. Lawrence S
25. Kale R
29. Perneger TV
Diamandis EP
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