Publikationsansicht

Do Open Access Articles Have a Greater Research Impact? (2004)

Abstract
While many authors believe that their work has a greater research impact if it is freely available, studies to demonstrate that impact are few. This study looks at articles in four disciplines at varying stages of adoption of open access—philosophy, political science, electrical and electronic engineering and mathematics—to see if they have a greater impact, as measured by citations in the ISI Web of Science database, if their authors make them freely available on the Internet. The finding is that, across all four disciplines, freely available articles do have a greater research impact. Shedding light on this category of open access reveals that scholars in diverse disciplines are both adopting open access practices and being rewarded for it.

Details der Publikation
Download http://eprints.rclis.org/2309/1/do_open_access_CRL.pdf
Herausgeber American Library Association
Archiv E-LIS (Italy)
Keywords BA. Use and impact of information.
Typ Journal Article (Print/Paginated), PeerReviewed
Verknüpfungen ARRAY(0xad25b50), http://eprints.rclis.org/2309/

Zitationen dieser Publikation (14)
Scholarly communication and open access : research communities and their publishing patterns [New Trends in Scholarly Communication : how do Authors of different research communities consider OA?] (2005)
Open access self-archiving: An author study (2005)
E-Journal Proliferation in Emerging Economies: the Case of Latin America (2004)
Filling Institutional Repositories by Serving the University's Needs (2006)
Expansion of the field of informetrics : origins and consequences (2005)
Expansion of the field of informetrics : origins and consequences (2006)
Hitting the ground running: building New Zealand’s first publicly available institutional repository (2006)
Pérenniser la publication scientifique : le mode « Archives Ouvertes » (2006)
Open Access: What is it and why should we have it? (2006)