Baldridge Abigail S, Huffman Mark D, Bloomfield Gerald S, Prabhakaran Dorairaj
Department of Preventive Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA.
Department of Preventive Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA.
Glob Heart. 2014 Jun;9(2):263-269.e2. doi: 10.1016/j.gheart.2013.12.006.
Studies have demonstrated strong associations between publication source and citations, as well as investigatory analysis of collaboration effects, in general and medical literature, but are limited to specific journals or short duration of time. This study sought to analyze time trends in cardiovascular research publications in leading general and specialty journals and to determine the association between collaboration and citation index. Cardiovascular publications were retrieved from Web of Knowledge by a cardiovascular bibliometric filter, and annual publication volumes in 8 general and specialty journals were compared. Univariable linear regression models were used to determine global and journal-specific trends for overall publication, cardiovascular publication, proportion of cardiovascular publication, collaboration, and citations. Cardiovascular publications increased (1999 to 2008) by 36% and number of sources by 74%. Volume increased in European Heart Journal (beta: 18.4, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 10.6 to 26.3) and decreased in Circulation (beta: -42.9, 95% CI: -79.3 to -6.5), Annals of Internal Medicine (beta: -1.9, 95% CI: -3.5 to -0.3), and Lancet (beta: -11.2, 95% CI: -14.7 to -7.8). Number of contributing countries increased in 3 journals: BMJ (beta: 0.8, 95% CI: 0.2 to 1.5), European Heart Journal (beta: -1.2, 95% CI: 0.8 to 1.7), and New England Journal of Medicine (beta: 1.6, 95% CI: 0.6 to 2.7). Fraction of collaborative publications increased (beta: 1.1 to 2.9) in all but Annals of Internal Medicine. Collaboration was associated with a higher median actual citation index (p < 0.0001). We found increasing trends in collaboration and citation in both general and specialty journals. Contribution by country in selected journals was disproportionate and under-represents total cardiovascular research in low- and middle-income countries.
研究表明,在一般文献和医学文献中,出版物来源与引用之间存在密切关联,以及对合作效应的调查分析,但这些研究仅限于特定期刊或较短时间段。本研究旨在分析主要综合期刊和专业期刊中心血管研究出版物的时间趋势,并确定合作与引用指数之间的关联。通过心血管文献计量过滤器从《科学引文索引》中检索心血管出版物,并比较8种综合期刊和专业期刊的年出版物量。使用单变量线性回归模型来确定总体出版物、心血管出版物、心血管出版物比例、合作和引用的全球及特定期刊趋势。心血管出版物数量(1999年至2008年)增加了36%,来源数量增加了74%。《欧洲心脏杂志》的刊量增加(β:18.4,95%置信区间[CI]:10.6至26.3),而《循环》(β:-42.9,95%CI:-79.3至-6.5)、《内科学年鉴》(β:-1.9,95%CI:-3.5至-0.3)和《柳叶刀》(β:-11.2,95%CI:-14.7至-7.8)的刊量减少。3种期刊的参与国家数量增加:《英国医学杂志》(β:0.8,95%CI:0.2至1.5)、《欧洲心脏杂志》(β:-1.2,95%CI:0.8至1.7)和《新英格兰医学杂志》(β:1.6,95%CI:0.6至2.7)。除《内科学年鉴》外,合作出版物的比例均有所增加(β:1.1至2.9)。合作与较高的实际引用指数中位数相关(p<0.0001)。我们发现综合期刊和专业期刊中的合作和引用均呈增加趋势。选定期刊中各国的贡献不成比例,且未能充分代表低收入和中等收入国家的总体心血管研究情况。