Evans Spencer C, Amaro Christina M, Herbert Robyn, Blossom Jennifer B, Roberts Michael C
Clinical Child Psychology Program, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, United States of America.
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Feb 14;13(2):e0192219. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0192219. eCollection 2018.
If a doctoral dissertation represents an original investigation that makes a contribution to one's field, then dissertation research could, and arguably should, be disseminated into the scientific literature. However, the extent and nature of dissertation publication remains largely unknown within psychology. The present study investigated the peer-reviewed publication outcomes of psychology dissertation research in the United States. Additionally, we examined publication lag, scientific impact, and variations across subfields. To investigate these questions, we first drew a stratified random cohort sample of 910 psychology Ph.D. dissertations from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses. Next, we conducted comprehensive literature searches for peer-reviewed journal articles derived from these dissertations published 0-7 years thereafter. Published dissertation articles were coded for their bibliographic details, citation rates, and journal impact metrics. Results showed that only one-quarter (25.6% [95% CI: 23.0, 28.4]) of dissertations were ultimately published in peer-reviewed journals, with significant variations across subfields (range: 10.1 to 59.4%). Rates of dissertation publication were lower in professional/applied subfields (e.g., clinical, counseling) compared to research/academic subfields (e.g., experimental, cognitive). When dissertations were published, however, they often appeared in influential journals (e.g., Thomson Reuters Impact Factor M = 2.84 [2.45, 3.23], 5-year Impact Factor M = 3.49 [3.07, 3.90]) and were cited numerous times (Web of Science citations per year M = 3.65 [2.88, 4.42]). Publication typically occurred within 2-3 years after the dissertation year. Overall, these results indicate that the large majority of Ph.D. dissertation research in psychology does not get disseminated into the peer-reviewed literature. The non-publication of dissertation research appears to be a systemic problem affecting both research and training in psychology. Efforts to improve the quality and "publishability" of doctoral dissertation research could benefit psychological science on multiple fronts.
如果一篇博士论文代表了一项原创性研究,并对其所在领域做出了贡献,那么论文研究就可以,而且可以说应该,被传播到科学文献中。然而,在心理学领域,论文发表的程度和性质在很大程度上仍然未知。本研究调查了美国心理学博士论文研究在同行评审期刊上的发表成果。此外,我们还考察了发表滞后、科学影响力以及各子领域之间的差异。为了研究这些问题,我们首先从ProQuest学位论文数据库中抽取了910篇心理学博士论文的分层随机队列样本。接下来,我们对这些论文在之后0至7年发表的同行评审期刊文章进行了全面的文献检索。已发表的论文文章根据其书目细节、引用率和期刊影响力指标进行编码。结果显示,只有四分之一(25.6% [95%置信区间:23.0, 28.4])的论文最终发表在同行评审期刊上,各子领域之间存在显著差异(范围:10.1%至59.4%)。与研究/学术子领域(如实验心理学、认知心理学)相比,专业/应用子领域(如临床心理学、咨询心理学)的论文发表率较低。然而,当论文发表时,它们往往发表在有影响力的期刊上(例如,汤姆森路透期刊影响因子M = 2.84 [2.45, 3.23],5年影响因子M = 3.49 [3.07, 3.90]),并且被多次引用(每年被科学引文索引引用次数M = 3.65 [2.88, 4.42])。发表通常在论文完成年份后的2至3年内。总体而言,这些结果表明,心理学领域的绝大多数博士论文研究并未被传播到同行评审文献中。论文研究未发表似乎是一个影响心理学研究和培训的系统性问题。提高博士论文研究质量和“可发表性”的努力可能会在多个方面使心理学受益。