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Journal Impact Factors: What Are They & How Can They Be Used? Pamela Sherwill, MLS, AHIP April 27, 2004
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History Of Impact Factors Created in the 60s to select journals for Science Citation Index Developed to compare journals regardless of their size Journal Impact Factors (IF) = Article IF Size & breadth of a scientific field determines “super-cited” papers Delays in reviewing and publication affects IF
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Impact Factor: A Definition Journals with high IF publish articles that are cited more often than journals with lower IF. If citation numbers are taken as a measure of quality, then these journals are high ranking by this measure.
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Key Determinants The key determinants are not the number of authors or articles in the field but the citation density and the age of the literature cited. The average number of citations per article and the immediacy of citation are the significant elements. The size of a field will generally increase the number of ‘super-cited’ papers. ---Eugene Garfield
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What Is An Impact Factor ? # of current citations a journal receives divided by the number of articles published in the two preceding years Citation Half Life How long articles in a journal continue to be cited after publication
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Citation Density Mean # of references cited per article Varies by discipline – lower in math than life sciences Higher in review articles Half-Life # of retrospective years required to find 50% of the cited references
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Calculating Impact Factors # of citations in the current year for a journal # items published in the journal for the last 2 years
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What Influences IF? Review articles cited more often Case reports rarely cited Rapid publication time > Self-citations > Bias towards rapidly evolving fields Cites not counted after 2 years Specialty journals have < IF
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Impact Factors Scientific journals score > than clinical ones US journals score > than European Review articles score > than original articles Methodological papers may score > than those with new data Free electronic access > the IF of a journal
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How Are IFs Used? Judge a publication’s quality or prestige Assess academic productivity Authors choosing where to publish Evaluate an author or journal editor Decisions for tenure & promotion By libraries to make collection decisions
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Nursing Journal Facts Journal Citation Reports (the source of IFs) rates 33 general nursing journals PubMed indexes 248 refereed nursing journals CINAHL indexes 548 active nursing journals ISI regards librarians as their primary customers ISI to > # of Nursing journals by 23 in 2006
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Determining Journal Quality Nursing limited # of journals rated (33) General nursing journals – not specialty Nursing journals – impact factors <2 IF does not measure impact of specific articles Not every article in a high impact journal is of high quality
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Self-Citations Encouraged by some editors/journals Not subtracted when IF is calculated Authors accumulate many self-citations ISI claims it has little effect on the relative rank of highly ranked journals Journals with IF <.5 have high self- citation rates
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Issues With JCR Database Prestige/quality is a murky concept Recent articles not enough time to be cited Citations not evenly distributed among articles in an issue Journal impact factor not article impact factor Pure clinicians read clinical articles but do not write or cite
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Issues With JCR Database (continued) Rapidly expanding fields tend to have >IF Letters, editorials, and news items not counted in article total but if cited are counted as citations for the journal Small # of articles lead to a large proportion of citations in a journal Limited # of evaluated journals
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Impact Factor Limitations Reflect the journal rather than the article Vary with time in numbers & ranking Changes in clinical interest affects IF Not related to the peer review process Can be manipulated by authors or editors 2-year period is arbitrary - not empirically based Journal availability affects the ranking Author citation errors
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Limitations (continued) Journal IF involve large populations of articles and citations Authors produce smaller numbers of articles 80/20 rule – 20% of the articles account for 80% of the citations IF can vary from journal issue to issue IF vary from year to year Lack of empiric studies on IF as measure of quality
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Impact Factor Alternatives No other formal evaluation tool Professional recommendations Refereed journals Editor’s reputation Editorial standards Experience & stature of editor & board
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Alternatives Time from acceptance to publication Acceptance/rejection rate Best quality journals are often most competitive in acceptance for publication
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Impact factor for different journals—recent. Name of journalImpact factor New Eng J Med50 Lancet28.4 JAMA28.8 BMJ12.8
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Older..
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Thank You
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