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Differences in impact factor across fields and over time
265
Citations
11
References
2008
Year
AltmetricsEconomicsEngineeringChange Impact AnalysisSocial ImpactCausal InferenceImpact AssessmentBibliometricsImpact Factor InflationInfluence MeasurementCitation AnalysisArtsJournal Impact FactorsStatisticsCitation GraphJournalismImpact Factor
The bibliometric measure impact factor is a leading indicator of journal influence used for decisions such as journal subscriptions, funding allocation, and tenure, yet it has increased gradually over time and varies widely across academic disciplines. This study aims to quantify inflation over time and differences across fields in impact factor scores and determine the sources of these differences. The authors analyze impact factor data to quantify inflation over time and differences across fields. The average number of citations in reference lists has increased gradually, driving impact factor inflation, while field‑specific variation in the fraction of citations to literature indexed by Thomson Scientific’s Journal Citation Reports is the main contributor to cross‑field differences, and overall growth rate of scientific literature and field size differences have little influence.
Abstract The bibliometric measure impact factor is a leading indicator of journal influence, and impact factors are routinely used in making decisions ranging from selecting journal subscriptions to allocating research funding to deciding tenure cases. Yet journal impact factors have increased gradually over time, and moreover impact factors vary widely across academic disciplines. Here we quantify inflation over time and differences across fields in impact factor scores and determine the sources of these differences. We find that the average number of citations in reference lists has increased gradually, and this is the predominant factor responsible for the inflation of impact factor scores over time. Field‐specific variation in the fraction of citations to literature indexed by Thomson Scientific's Journal Citation Reports is the single greatest contributor to differences among the impact factors of journals in different fields. The growth rate of the scientific literature as a whole, and cross‐field differences in net size and growth rate of individual fields, have had very little influence on impact factor inflation or on cross‐field differences in impact factor.
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