Abstract

Articles from open access and local journals are important resources for research in Korea and the usage trends of these articles are important indicators for the assessment of the current research practice. We analyzed an institutional collection of published papers from 1998 to 2014 authored by researchers from Seoul National University, and their references from papers published between 1998 and 2011. The published papers were collected from Web of Science or Scopus and were analyzed according to the proportion of articles from open access journals. Their cited references from published papers in Web of Science were analyzed according to the proportion of local (South Korean) or open access journals. The proportion of open access papers was relatively stable until 2006 (2.5 ~ 5.2% in Web of Science and 2.7 ~ 4.2% in Scopus), but then increased to 15.9% (Web of Science) or 18.5% (Scopus) in 2014. We analyzed 2,750,485 cited references from 52,295 published papers. We found that the overall proportion of cited articles from local journals was 1.8% and that for open access journals was 3.0%. Citations of open access articles have increased since 2006 to 4.1% in 2011, although the increase in open access article citations was less than for open access publications. The proportion of citations from local journals was even lower. We think that the publishing / citing mismatch is a term to describe this difference, which is an issue at Seoul National University, where the number of published papers at open access or local journals is increasing but the number of citations is not. The cause of this discrepancy is multi-factorial but the governmental / institutional policies, social / cultural issues and authors' citing behaviors will explain the mismatch. However, additional measures are also necessary, such as the development of an institutional citation database and improved search capabilities with respect to local and open access documents.

Highlights

  • ObjectivesWe do not believe this bias is intentional, but if it exists, we should correct for it

  • The increasing popularity of the internet has resulted in several changes to the use of the scholarly information

  • We developed our journal lists from different online sources, that is, Web of Science (WoS) [27], Scopus [28], Ulrich’s Global Serials Directory [29], the directory of open access (OA) journals (DOAJ) [30], PubMed database [31], BioMed Central (BMC) [32], and the Korean Citation Index (KCI) [33]

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Summary

Objectives

We do not believe this bias is intentional, but if it exists, we should correct for it.

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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