Suppr超能文献

信息图推广对研究传播和读者群的影响:一项随机对照试验。

The effect of an infographic promotion on research dissemination and readership: A randomized controlled trial.

作者信息

Huang Simon, Martin Lynsey J, Yeh Calvin H, Chin Alvin, Murray Heather, Sanderson William B, Mohindra Rohit, Chan Teresa M, Thoma Brent

机构信息

*Department of Emergency Medicine,University of Saskatchewan,Saskatoon,SK.

†Department of Emergency Medicine,University of Toronto,Toronto,ON.

出版信息

CJEM. 2018 Nov;20(6):826-833. doi: 10.1017/cem.2018.436. Epub 2018 Oct 5.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Journals use social media to increase the awareness of their publications. Infographics show research findings in a concise and visually appealing manner, well suited for dissemination on social media platforms. We hypothesized that infographic abstracts promoted on social media would increase the dissemination and online readership of the parent research articles.

METHODS

Twenty-four articles were chosen from the six issues of CJEM published between July 2016 and June 2017 and randomized to infographic or control groups. All articles were disseminated through the journal’s social media accounts (Twitter and Facebook). Control articles were promoted using a screen capture image of each article’s abstract on the journal’s social media accounts. Infographic articles were promoted similarly using a visual infographic. Infographics were also published and promoted on the CanadiEM.org’s website and social media channels. Abstract views, full-text views, and the change in Altmetric score were compared between groups using unpaired two-tailed t-tests.

RESULTS

There were no significant differences in the groups at baseline. Abstract views (mean, 95% CI) were higher in the infographics (379, 287-471) than the control group (176, 136-215, p<0.001). Mean change in Altmetric scores was higher in the infographics (26, 18-34) than in the control group (3, 2-4, p<0.0001). There was no difference in full-text views between the infographics (50, 0-101) and control groups (25, 18-32).

CONCLUSION

The promotion of CJEM articles using infographics on social media and the CanadiEM.org website increased Altmetric scores and abstract views. Infographics may have a role in increasing awareness of medical literature.

摘要

目的

期刊利用社交媒体提高其出版物的知名度。信息图表以简洁且视觉上吸引人的方式展示研究结果,非常适合在社交媒体平台上传播。我们假设在社交媒体上推广的信息图表摘要会增加母研究文章的传播和在线读者数量。

方法

从2016年7月至2017年6月出版的六期《加拿大急诊医学杂志》(CJEM)中选取24篇文章,并随机分为信息图表组或对照组。所有文章均通过该期刊的社交媒体账户(推特和脸书)进行传播。对照组文章通过在期刊社交媒体账户上展示每篇文章摘要的屏幕截图来推广。信息图表文章则使用视觉信息图表以类似方式推广。信息图表也在CanadiEM.org网站和社交媒体渠道上发布和推广。使用未配对双尾t检验比较两组之间的摘要浏览量、全文浏览量以及Altmetric评分的变化。

结果

两组在基线时无显著差异。信息图表组的摘要浏览量(均值,95%置信区间)(379,287 - 471)高于对照组(176,136 - 215,p<0.001)。信息图表组的Altmetric评分平均变化(26,18 - 34)高于对照组(3,2 - 4,p<0.0001)。信息图表组(50,0 - 101)和对照组(25,18 - 32)的全文浏览量无差异。

结论

在社交媒体和CanadiEM.org网站上使用信息图表推广CJEM文章可提高Altmetric评分和摘要浏览量。信息图表可能在提高医学文献的知名度方面发挥作用。

文献检索

告别复杂PubMed语法,用中文像聊天一样搜索,搜遍4000万医学文献。AI智能推荐,让科研检索更轻松。

立即免费搜索

文件翻译

保留排版,准确专业,支持PDF/Word/PPT等文件格式,支持 12+语言互译。

免费翻译文档

深度研究

AI帮你快速写综述,25分钟生成高质量综述,智能提取关键信息,辅助科研写作。

立即免费体验