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WSJ in impact factor



No doubt many of the members of this list will already have seen the article in today's Wall St. Journal on "gaming" the impact factor for science journals. As the WSJ site requires a subscription, the link is useless, though presumably many on this list have access through institutional subscriptions. The byline is Sharon Begley, the headline is: Science Journals Artfully Try To Boost Their Rankings. It is dated June 5 and appears on page B1 of the hardcopy edition (so the online citation says).

The gist of the article is that some journals are trying to increase their citation count in somewhat devious ways, thus improving their impact factor as measured by ISI. I doubt any of this comes as a surprise to anyone but a journalist, who, like FEMA, always get to the action ten years too late.

What should be clear, however, is that impact factors and ISI's unofficial role as umpire for the academy are coming under heavy challenges and may indeed be bankrupt. New measurements are needed, but of what kind? I am myself biased toward page views, which speak to readership rather than authorship. One of the benefits of using page views is that there is a huge Internet industry in the consumer sector that has already built the tools for counting and auditing page views. I am sure there are other ideas worth considering.

And, yes, this has important implications. Page views put an emphasis on findability, which means more search engine optimization and less hierarchical Web site architectures. Open Access lends itself to findability--indeed, it is OA's principal merit. Page views militate against mediating interfaces, whether the portal of a publisher or a library.

Universities "in-source" many things and "out-source" others; the logic behind some of these decisions is not always self-evident. What is truly odd, however, is the outsourcing of the certification process to publishers, whether commercial or not-for-profit, leaving ISI to stand behind home plate and call the balls and strikes. Someone who wants to transform scholarly communications would start by selecting a new umpire.

Joe Esposito