Title of article
Do Article Influence scores overestimate the citation impact of social science journals in subfields that are related to higher-impact natural science disciplines?
Author/Authors
Walters، نويسنده , , William H.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
10
From page
421
To page
430
Abstract
Unlike Impact Factors (IF), Article Influence (AI) scores assign greater weight to citations that appear in highly cited journals. The natural sciences tend to have higher citation rates than the social sciences. We might therefore expect that relative to IF, AI overestimates the citation impact of social science journals in subfields that are related to (and presumably cited in) higher-impact natural science disciplines. This study evaluates that assertion through a set of simple and multiple regressions covering seven social science disciplines: anthropology, communication, economics, education, library and information science, psychology, and sociology. Contrary to expectations, AI underestimates 5IF (five-year Impact Factor) for journals in science-related subfields such as scientific communication, science education, scientometrics, biopsychology, and medical sociology. Journals in these subfields have low AI scores relative to their 5IF values. Moreover, the effect of science-related status is considerable—typically 0.60 5IF units or 0.50 SD. This effect is independent of the more general finding that AI scores underestimate 5IF for higher-impact journals. It is also independent of the very modest curvilinearity in the relationship between AI and 5IF.
Keywords
Journal Citation Reports , Web of Science , Interdisciplinary , bias , Multidisciplinary , Eigenfactor
Journal title
Journal of Informetrics
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Journal of Informetrics
Record number
1387669
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