Antoniou George A, Antoniou Stavros A, Georgakarakos Efstratios I, Sfyroeras George S, Georgiadis George S
Department of Vascular Surgery, Northern Vascular Centre, Freeman Hospital, Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Newcastle, UK.
Department of Surgery, University Hospital of Heraklion, University of Crete, Heraklion, Greece.
Ann Vasc Surg. 2015 Feb;29(2):286-92. doi: 10.1016/j.avsg.2014.09.017. Epub 2014 Nov 13.
Dissemination of research findings in the scientific community is reflected by the citation count. Our objective was to investigate the relative citation impact of vascular research studies and identify potential predictors of increased citation rates.
Articles published in leading journals of vascular and general surgery (Journal of Vascular Surgery, European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Journal of Endovascular Therapy, Annals of Vascular Surgery and Annals of Surgery, British Journal of Surgery, Journal of the American College of Surgeons, and JAMA Surgery) during a 4-month period were identified through electronic databases. Variables potentially associated with increased citation rates, including subject, design, title characteristics, article length, bibliographic references, authorship, geographic distribution, interdisciplinary collaboration, article access, and funding, were assessed in univariate and multiple linear regression models through December 2012.
A total of 226 articles with a total number of 4,605 citations were identified. Univariate analysis revealed that endovascular-related studies, study design, studies reporting design in the title, long articles, and studies with high number of references were associated with higher citation rates. On multivariate analysis, 3 variables were found to independently predict the number of citations: study subject (endovascular-related studies; regression coefficient [95% confidence interval], 0.474 [0.240-0.708]; P < 0.001); study design (randomized controlled trial; regression coefficient [95% confidence interval], 0.575 [0.145-1.005]; P = 0.009); and article length (number of pages; regression coefficient [95% confidence interval], 0.069 [0.016-0.123]; P = 0.011).
Authors involved in vascular research may enhance the impact of their work by embarking on research strategies of high methodologic quality and pursuing work related with new technologies and evolving endovascular therapies.
科研成果在科学界的传播情况通过被引频次得以体现。我们的目的是调查血管研究的相对被引影响力,并确定被引率增加的潜在预测因素。
通过电子数据库识别在4个月期间发表于血管外科和普通外科主要期刊(《血管外科杂志》《欧洲血管与血管内外科杂志》《血管内治疗杂志》《血管外科学年鉴》《外科学年鉴》《英国外科杂志》《美国外科医师学会杂志》以及《美国医学会外科杂志》)上的文章。在单变量和多元线性回归模型中评估了可能与被引率增加相关的变量,包括主题、设计、标题特征、文章长度、参考文献、作者身份、地理分布、跨学科合作、文章获取途径以及资金资助情况,直至2012年12月。
共识别出226篇文章,总被引次数为4605次。单变量分析显示,与血管内相关的研究、研究设计、标题中报告设计的研究、长篇文章以及参考文献数量多的研究与较高的被引率相关。多变量分析发现,有3个变量可独立预测被引次数:研究主题(与血管内相关的研究;回归系数[95%置信区间],0.474[0.240 - 0.708];P < 0.001);研究设计(随机对照试验;回归系数[95%置信区间],0.575[0.145 - 1.005];P = 0.009);以及文章长度(页数;回归系数[95%置信区间],0.069[0.016 - 0.123];P = 0.011)。
参与血管研究的作者可通过采用高质量的研究策略以及开展与新技术和不断发展的血管内治疗相关的工作,来增强其研究工作的影响力。