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Re: Open access to research worth A3 1.5bn a year
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Open access to research worth A3 1.5bn a year
- From: Phil Davis <pmd8@cornell.edu>
- Date: Thu, 29 Sep 2005 21:17:37 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
I just read the JEP article (referred to by Peter Banks) comparing
articles printed in Pediatrics with other articles only appearing in the
online addition. The authors' main findings suggest that despite wider
potential audience for articles published freely online, articles
appearing in print received more citations:
"The difference between the mean citation levels for print and online was
3.09 �0.93 in favor of print (95% CI), meaning that an online article
could expect to receive 2.16 to 4.02 fewer citations in the literature
than if it had been printed."
Or in other words, their data do not support the hypothesis that full OA
journals receive more citations than non-full OA journals.
Yet it is methodologically difficult to rigorously test this hypothesis,
and the use of inferential statistics in this study suggests that they are
trying to generalize beyond their own journal. In this study, the authors
compared two different sets of articles: 1) those that were selected for
inclusion in the main journal, and 2) those that were not. Selection bias
alone may explain the different results, or at least interject a large
enough bias where the results may not accurately reflect their research
question. In other words, it would be difficult to understand whether
their results are a reflection of accessibility, or selection bias.
Still, this article fails to support the unstated hypothesis that full OA
journal articles receive more citations than non-full OA journal articles. For that conclusion alone, we would be wise to stay with the null
hypothesis (that is, no significant difference) unless we start seeing
compelling evidence the other way.
The other conclusion that we may come to is that it may be impossible to
come up with universal statements about Open Access publishing (i.e. it
can provide 50 - 25% more citations). Methodology problems in designing
rigorous studies may only permit us to make anecdotal statements about
particular journals or publishing models that have very narrow parameters
for generalization.
--Phil Davis
At 06:33 PM 9/28/2005, you wrote:
I did find one peer-reviewed study on the impact of open access on citation rate: "Publishing Online-Only Peer-Reviewed Biomedical Literature: Three Years of Citation, Author Perception, and Usage Experience," by Kent Anderson and his colleagues. It is a study of online-only vs. print articles in the journal Pediatrics. It does not find the same citation advantage for online publications claimed by Harnad and his colleagues. See http://www.press.umich.edu/jep/06-03/anderson.html Peter Banks
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