Gallagher E J, Barnaby D P
Department of Emergency Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY, USA.
Ann Emerg Med. 1998 Jan;31(1):83-6. doi: 10.1016/s0196-0644(98)70286-0.
The "impact factor" published in Science Citation Index (SCI) is widely used in the scientific community to measure the relative importance of a medical journal. In contrast to all other indicators of academic growth in emergency medicine, impact factors for emergency medicine journals have remained low and unchanged since the inception of the specialty. We wished to investigate this incongruity.
We examined the methodology used to derive the SCI's journal impact factor.
The impact factor for journals is defined mathematically as the number of times a journal is cited over a period of time (the numerator) divided by the number of articles published by that journal during the same period (the denominator). Citation counts are derived from examination of all references contained in a subset of journals known as "source" journals. No emergency medicine journals are included in this group. The only source of citations for emergency medicine journals is from journals outside of emergency medicine. This produces small numerators with relatively constant denominators, leading to low impact factors.
The apparent failure of emergency medicine journals, as measured by the SCI impact factor, to keep pace with other indicators of academic development of the field is at least in part attributable to a methodologic bias inherent in the derivation of this factor.
《科学引文索引》(SCI)发布的“影响因子”在科学界被广泛用于衡量医学期刊的相对重要性。与急诊医学学术发展的所有其他指标相比,自该专业创立以来,急诊医学期刊的影响因子一直很低且没有变化。我们希望研究这种不一致性。
我们研究了用于得出SCI期刊影响因子的方法。
期刊的影响因子在数学上定义为某一时间段内期刊被引用的次数(分子)除以该期刊在同一时期发表的文章数量(分母)。引用次数来自对一组被称为“来源”期刊的子集中包含的所有参考文献的审查。这组期刊中不包括任何急诊医学期刊。急诊医学期刊的唯一引用来源是急诊医学领域以外的期刊。这导致分子较小而分母相对恒定,从而产生较低的影响因子。
以SCI影响因子衡量,急诊医学期刊明显未能与该领域学术发展的其他指标同步,这至少部分归因于该因子推导过程中固有的方法学偏差。