Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Self-citations, a trend prevalent across subject disciplines at the global level: an overview
View through CrossRef
Purpose
The present study aims to determine the prevailing trend of self-citations across 27 major subject disciplines at global level. The study also examines the aspects like percentage of self-citations in each individual subject discipline and the average number of self-citations per publication across different subject disciplines. The study also investigates self-citation percentage of research articles published from the 20 leading research countries of the world and across the continents.
Design/methodology/approach
The study is supported by empirical findings undertaken on secondary data retrieved from SCImago Journal and Country Ranking, which is entirely based on the SCOPUS data source (SCImago, 2014).
Findings
In all, 76,634,557 citations were received by as many as 14,946,975 research articles published from 2008-2012 at an average of 5.12 citations per article. Of the total citations received, 26,404,609 (34.45 per cent) were self-citations, which means that of the total citations received by each research article, 1.76 are self-citations. Compared to subject disciplines falling under social and humanistic sciences, pure and applied sciences have shown a greater trend of self-citation. On average, 4.18 self-citations were observed in each research article published in multidisciplinary subject disciplines. Of the total citations received by research articles published in the discipline of Psychology, 43.69 per cent are self-citations, the highest among all the subject disciplines under study. Of the total self-citations received by all the subject disciplines under study, 18.43 per cent were received alone in medicine, highest among all, whereas Social and Humanistic sciences received less than 1.00 per cent self-citations, the lowest among all the subject disciplines.
Originality/value
This study is original and first of its kind covering each individual subject discipline having global scope.
Title: Self-citations, a trend prevalent across subject disciplines at the global level: an overview
Description:
Purpose
The present study aims to determine the prevailing trend of self-citations across 27 major subject disciplines at global level.
The study also examines the aspects like percentage of self-citations in each individual subject discipline and the average number of self-citations per publication across different subject disciplines.
The study also investigates self-citation percentage of research articles published from the 20 leading research countries of the world and across the continents.
Design/methodology/approach
The study is supported by empirical findings undertaken on secondary data retrieved from SCImago Journal and Country Ranking, which is entirely based on the SCOPUS data source (SCImago, 2014).
Findings
In all, 76,634,557 citations were received by as many as 14,946,975 research articles published from 2008-2012 at an average of 5.
12 citations per article.
Of the total citations received, 26,404,609 (34.
45 per cent) were self-citations, which means that of the total citations received by each research article, 1.
76 are self-citations.
Compared to subject disciplines falling under social and humanistic sciences, pure and applied sciences have shown a greater trend of self-citation.
On average, 4.
18 self-citations were observed in each research article published in multidisciplinary subject disciplines.
Of the total citations received by research articles published in the discipline of Psychology, 43.
69 per cent are self-citations, the highest among all the subject disciplines under study.
Of the total self-citations received by all the subject disciplines under study, 18.
43 per cent were received alone in medicine, highest among all, whereas Social and Humanistic sciences received less than 1.
00 per cent self-citations, the lowest among all the subject disciplines.
Originality/value
This study is original and first of its kind covering each individual subject discipline having global scope.
Related Results
Tekstualni subjekt u poeziji Marije Stepanove od 2001. do 2017. godine
Tekstualni subjekt u poeziji Marije Stepanove od 2001. do 2017. godine
Maria Stepanova (b. 1972) is a contemporary Russian poet who has emerged in recent decades as one of the most original and complex voices on the poetically highly heterogeneous and...
Wayback machine: reincarnation to vanished online citations
Wayback machine: reincarnation to vanished online citations
Purpose
– The purpose of this paper is to know the rate of loss of online citations used as references in scholarly journals. It also indented to recover the vanish...
Is a Fitbit a Diary? Self-Tracking and Autobiography
Is a Fitbit a Diary? Self-Tracking and Autobiography
Data becomes something of a mirror in which people see themselves reflected. (Sorapure 270)In a 2014 essay for The New Yorker, the humourist David Sedaris recounts an obsession spu...
Aberration of the citation
Aberration of the citation
Multiple inherent biases related to different citation practices (for e.g., self-citations, negative citations, wrong citations, multi-authorship-biased citations, honorary citatio...
Interdependencies in Citation Metrics Using Dimensions (Case Study of Two NAUKMA Journals)
Interdependencies in Citation Metrics Using Dimensions (Case Study of Two NAUKMA Journals)
Quantitative data are increasingly influencing the evaluation of the effectiveness of research and researchers. Citations may be the main metric to assess the quality and value of ...
Persistence and half‐life of URL citations cited in LIS open access journals
Persistence and half‐life of URL citations cited in LIS open access journals
PurposeThe main purpose of the present study is to examine the availability and persistence of URL citations in two LIS open access journals. It also intended to calculate the half...
THE ‘PARENT’ IN THE PARENTING STYLE:
A CORRELATIONAL STUDY EXPLORING THE IMPACT OF PARENTING ON SELF-CONCEPT OF THE ADOLESCENT (Preprint)
THE ‘PARENT’ IN THE PARENTING STYLE:
A CORRELATIONAL STUDY EXPLORING THE IMPACT OF PARENTING ON SELF-CONCEPT OF THE ADOLESCENT (Preprint)
BACKGROUND
The present research attempts to explore the dynamics of parent child relationship. The investigation aims at understanding the impact of parenti...
10 Years of Toxicogenomics section in Frontiers in Genetics: Past discoveries and Future Perspectives
10 Years of Toxicogenomics section in Frontiers in Genetics: Past discoveries and Future Perspectives
The Frontiers Media family has over 200 journals, which are each headed by usually one Field Chief Editor, and several specialty sections, which are each headed by one or more Spec...

