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科学界对 COVID-19 大流行的反应:一项基于主题的时间趋势文献计量分析。

How the scientific community responded to the COVID-19 pandemic: A subject-level time-trend bibliometric analysis.

机构信息

Non-Communicable Diseases Research Center, Endocrinology and Metabolism Population Sciences Institute, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.

Social Determinants of Health Research Center, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2021 Sep 30;16(9):e0258064. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0258064. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

COVID-19 has triggered an avalanche of research publications, the various aspects of which need to be assessed. The objective of this study is to determine the scientific community's response patterns to COVID-19 through a bibliometric analysis of the time-trends, global contribution, international collaboration, open-access provision, science domains of focus, and the behavior of journals.

METHODS

The bibliographic records on COVID-19 literature were retrieved from both PubMed and Scopus. The period for searching was set from November 1, 2019, to April 15, 2021. The bibliographic data were coupled with COVID-19 incidence to explore possible association, as well as World Bank indicators and classification of economies.

RESULTS

A total of 159132 records were included in the study. Following the escalation of incidences of COVID-19 in late 2020 and early 2021, the monthly publication count made a new peak in March 2021 at 20505. Overall, 125155 (78.6%) were national, 22548 (14.2%) were bi-national, and 11429 (7.2%) were multi-national. Low-income countries with 928 (66.8%) international publications had the highest percentage of international. The open-access provision decreased from 85.5% in February 2020 to 62.0% in April 2021. As many as 82841 (70.8%) publications were related to health sciences, followed by life sciences 27031 (23.1%), social sciences 20291 (17.3%), and physical sciences 15141 (12.9%). The top three medical subjects in publications were general internal medicine, public health, and infectious diseases with 28.9%, 18.3%, and 12.6% of medical publications, respectively.

CONCLUSIONS

The association between the incidence and publication count indicated the scientific community's interest in the ongoing situation and timely response to it. Only one-fifth of publications resulted from international collaboration, which might lead to redundancy without adding significant value. Our study underscores the necessity of policies for attraction of international collaboration and direction of vital funds toward domains of higher priority.

摘要

背景

COVID-19 引发了大量的研究文献,需要对其各个方面进行评估。本研究旨在通过对时间趋势、全球贡献、国际合作、开放获取提供、关注的科学领域以及期刊行为的文献计量分析,确定科学界对 COVID-19 的反应模式。

方法

从 PubMed 和 Scopus 中检索 COVID-19 文献的书目记录。搜索时间设定为 2019 年 11 月 1 日至 2021 年 4 月 15 日。将书目数据与 COVID-19 发病率相结合,以探索可能的关联,以及世界银行指标和经济分类。

结果

本研究共纳入 159132 条记录。随着 2020 年末和 2021 年初 COVID-19 发病率的上升,2021 年 3 月每月发表的论文数量达到新的峰值 20505 篇。总体而言,125155 篇(78.6%)为国内论文,22548 篇(14.2%)为双国籍论文,11429 篇(7.2%)为多国籍论文。国际出版物比例最高的是低收入国家,占 928 篇(66.8%)。开放获取的提供从 2020 年 2 月的 85.5%下降到 2021 年 4 月的 62.0%。多达 82841 篇(70.8%)的出版物与健康科学有关,其次是生命科学 27031 篇(23.1%)、社会科学 20291 篇(17.3%)和物理科学 15141 篇(12.9%)。出版物中排名前三的医学科目是普通内科、公共卫生和传染病,分别占医学出版物的 28.9%、18.3%和 12.6%。

结论

发病率与发表数量之间的关联表明,科学界对当前形势的关注及其对当前形势的及时反应。只有五分之一的出版物是国际合作的结果,这可能导致没有显著价值的重复。我们的研究强调了吸引国际合作和将重要资金投向更高优先级领域的政策的必要性。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/e0db/8483337/92265aad262c/pone.0258064.g001.jpg

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