The Citation Advantage of Open Access Articles.pdf (346.02 kB)
The citation advantage of open-access articles
journal contribution
posted on 2009-01-12, 10:24 authored by Michael Norris, Charles Oppenheim, Fytton RowlandFour subjects, ecology, applied mathematics, sociology and economics, were selected to assess whether there is a citation advantage between journal articles that have an open access (OA) version on the Internet compared to those articles that are exclusively toll access (TA). Citations were counted using the Web of Science and the OA status of articles was determined by searching OAIster, OpenDOAR, Google and Google Scholar. Of a sample of 4633 articles examined, 2280 (49%) were OA and had a mean citation count of 9.04, whereas the mean for TA articles was 5.76. There appears to be a clear citation advantage for those articles that are OA as opposed to those that are TA. This advantage, however, varies between disciplines, with sociology having the highest citation advantage but the lowest number of OA articles from the sample taken and ecology having the highest individual citation count for OA articles but the smallest citation advantage. Tests of correlation or association between OA status and a number of variables were generally found to be weak or inconsistent. The cause of this citation advantage has not been determined.
History
School
- Science
Department
- Information Science
Citation
NORRIS, M., OPPENHEIM, C. and ROWLAND, F., 2008. The citation advantage of open-access articles. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 59 (12), pp. 1963-1972.Publisher
Wiley (© ASIS&T)Version
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Publication date
2008Notes
This article published was published in the journal, Journal of the American Society for Information Science [© 2008 ASIS&T] and the definitive version is available at: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1002/(ISSN)1532-2890ISSN
1532-2890;1532-2882Publisher version
Language
- en