Sanfilippo Filippo, Tigano Stefano, Morgana Alberto, Murabito Paolo, Astuto Marinella
Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, A.O.U., "Policlinico-Vittorio Emanuele" University Hospital, via S. Sofia 78, 95100, Catania, Italy.
.School of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, University Hospital "G. Rodolico", University of Catania, Catania, Italy.
J Intensive Care. 2021 Jan 26;9(1):15. doi: 10.1186/s40560-021-00530-2.
Inappropriate authors' self-citation (A-SC) is a growing mal-practice possibly boosted by the raising importance given to author's metrics. Similarly, also excessive journals' self-citation (J-SC) practice may factitiously influence journal's metrics (impact factor, IF). Evaluating the appropriateness of each self-citation remains challenging.
We evaluated the presence of policies discouraging A-SC in Critical Care Medicine (CCM) journals with IF. We also calculated the J-SC rate of these journals. In order to evaluate if J-SC rates are influenced by the focus of interest of CCM journals, we separated them in three sub-categories ("multidisciplinary", "broad" or "topic-specific" CCM journals). We analyzed 35 CCM journals and only 5 (14.3%) discouraged excessive and inappropriate A-SC. The median IF was higher in CCM journals with A-SC policies [4.1 (3-12)] as compared to those without [2.5 (2-3.5); p = 0.02]. The J-SC rate was highly variable (0-35.4%), and not influenced by the presence of A-SC policies (p = 0.32). However, J-SC rate was different according to the focus of interest (p = 0.01): in particular, it was higher in "topic-specific" CCM journals [15.3 (8.8-23.3%)], followed by "broad" CCM [11.8 (4.8-17.9%)] and "multidisciplinary" journals [6.1 (3.6-9.1%)].
A limited number of CCM journals have policies for limiting A-SC, and these have higher IF. The J-SC rate among CCM journals is highly variable and higher in "topic-specific" interest CCM journals. Excluding self-referencing practice from scientific metrics calculation could be valuable to tackle this scientific malpractice.
作者不当自引(A-SC)是一种日益普遍的不良行为,可能因对作者指标的重视程度不断提高而加剧。同样,期刊过度自引(J-SC)行为也可能人为地影响期刊指标(影响因子,IF)。评估每次自引的合理性仍然具有挑战性。
我们评估了具有影响因子的《重症医学》(CCM)期刊中是否存在抑制作者不当自引的政策。我们还计算了这些期刊的期刊自引率。为了评估期刊自引率是否受CCM期刊兴趣焦点的影响,我们将它们分为三个子类别(“多学科”、“广泛”或“特定主题”的CCM期刊)。我们分析了35种CCM期刊,只有5种(14.3%)抑制过度和不当的作者自引。与没有此类政策的期刊相比,有作者自引政策的CCM期刊的中位影响因子更高[4.1(3-12)],而无政策的期刊为[2.5(2-3.5);p = 0.02]。期刊自引率差异很大(0-35.4%),且不受作者自引政策的影响(p = 0.32)。然而,期刊自引率因兴趣焦点而异(p = 0.01):特别是,“特定主题”的CCM期刊中的自引率更高[15.3(8.8-23.3%)],其次是“广泛”的CCM期刊[11.8(4.8-17.9%)]和“多学科”期刊[6.1(3.6-9.1%)]。
少数CCM期刊有限制作者自引的政策,且这些期刊的影响因子更高。CCM期刊中的期刊自引率差异很大,在“特定主题”兴趣的CCM期刊中更高。在科学指标计算中排除自引行为可能有助于解决这种学术不端行为。