Tweet success? Scientific communication correlates with increased citations in Ecology and Conservation

Science communication is seen as critical for the disciplines of ecology and conservation, where research products are often used to shape policy and decision making. Scientists are increasing their online media communication, via social media and news. Such media engagement has been thought to infl...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Clayton T. Lamb, Sophie L. Gilbert, Adam T. Ford
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2018-04-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/4564.pdf
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spelling doaj-6241e6a627264d69939951372f3b94812020-11-24T22:31:17ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592018-04-016e456410.7717/peerj.4564Tweet success? Scientific communication correlates with increased citations in Ecology and ConservationClayton T. Lamb0Sophie L. Gilbert1Adam T. Ford2Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, CanadaDepartment of Fish and Wildlife Sciences, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID, United States of AmericaDepartment of Biology, University of British Columbia, Kelowna, British Columbia, CanadaScience communication is seen as critical for the disciplines of ecology and conservation, where research products are often used to shape policy and decision making. Scientists are increasing their online media communication, via social media and news. Such media engagement has been thought to influence or predict traditional metrics of scholarship, such as citation rates. Here, we measure the association between citation rates and the Altmetric Attention Score—an indicator of the amount and reach of the attention an article has received—along with other forms of bibliometric performance (year published, journal impact factor, and article type). We found that Attention Score was positively correlated with citation rates. However, in recent years, we detected increasing media exposure did not relate to the equivalent citations as in earlier years; signalling a diminishing return on investment. Citations correlated with journal impact factors up to ∼13, but then plateaued, demonstrating that maximizing citations does not require publishing in the highest-impact journals. We conclude that ecology and conservation researchers can increase exposure of their research through social media engagement and, simultaneously, enhance their performance under traditional measures of scholarly activity.https://peerj.com/articles/4564.pdfAltmetricScience communicationTwitterSocial mediaEnter a keyword
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Clayton T. Lamb
Sophie L. Gilbert
Adam T. Ford
spellingShingle Clayton T. Lamb
Sophie L. Gilbert
Adam T. Ford
Tweet success? Scientific communication correlates with increased citations in Ecology and Conservation
PeerJ
Altmetric
Science communication
Twitter
Social media
Enter a keyword
author_facet Clayton T. Lamb
Sophie L. Gilbert
Adam T. Ford
author_sort Clayton T. Lamb
title Tweet success? Scientific communication correlates with increased citations in Ecology and Conservation
title_short Tweet success? Scientific communication correlates with increased citations in Ecology and Conservation
title_full Tweet success? Scientific communication correlates with increased citations in Ecology and Conservation
title_fullStr Tweet success? Scientific communication correlates with increased citations in Ecology and Conservation
title_full_unstemmed Tweet success? Scientific communication correlates with increased citations in Ecology and Conservation
title_sort tweet success? scientific communication correlates with increased citations in ecology and conservation
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Science communication is seen as critical for the disciplines of ecology and conservation, where research products are often used to shape policy and decision making. Scientists are increasing their online media communication, via social media and news. Such media engagement has been thought to influence or predict traditional metrics of scholarship, such as citation rates. Here, we measure the association between citation rates and the Altmetric Attention Score—an indicator of the amount and reach of the attention an article has received—along with other forms of bibliometric performance (year published, journal impact factor, and article type). We found that Attention Score was positively correlated with citation rates. However, in recent years, we detected increasing media exposure did not relate to the equivalent citations as in earlier years; signalling a diminishing return on investment. Citations correlated with journal impact factors up to ∼13, but then plateaued, demonstrating that maximizing citations does not require publishing in the highest-impact journals. We conclude that ecology and conservation researchers can increase exposure of their research through social media engagement and, simultaneously, enhance their performance under traditional measures of scholarly activity.
topic Altmetric
Science communication
Twitter
Social media
Enter a keyword
url https://peerj.com/articles/4564.pdf
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