Measures of journal quality should separate reviews from original research

Metrics of journal quality (e.g., impact factors) are often used to make important judgements regarding journal quality and importance. It is well known that reviews are more highly cited than original research articles. Therefore, it is not surprising that review journals within a field tend to hav...

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Main Authors: Sarah R Supp, Ethan P White
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Queen's University 2010-09-01
Series:Ideas in Ecology and Evolution
Online Access:https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/IEE/article/view/2386
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spelling doaj-fd25df621b8a42478e97c4f570097dbb2020-11-25T02:34:00ZengQueen's UniversityIdeas in Ecology and Evolution1918-31782010-09-0132386Measures of journal quality should separate reviews from original researchSarah R Supp0Ethan P White1Utah State UniversityUtah State UniversityMetrics of journal quality (e.g., impact factors) are often used to make important judgements regarding journal quality and importance. It is well known that reviews are more highly cited than original research articles. Therefore, it is not surprising that review journals within a field tend to have the highest scores on measures of journal impact/quality. However, many journals publish both reviews and original research, which may lead to a misleading ranking system because published metrics are a mixture of two potentially independent measures with different means. In addition, journals under pressure to increase their impact factors have suggested that changing publication practices to include more reviews is a legitimate manipulation. However, the proportion of reviews published is not directly related to journal quality. Using 20 top ecology journals, we measure the influence of reviews on impact factor and clearly show that the proportion of reviews published by a journal can explain more than 75% of the observed variability in measures of journal quality. We suggest that these measures will be more useful if they are reported separately for articles and reviews. In contrast to other articles published on the problems with impact factors, we suggest a clear, simple solution that could be readily instituted with little change to the existing system.https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/IEE/article/view/2386
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah R Supp
Ethan P White
spellingShingle Sarah R Supp
Ethan P White
Measures of journal quality should separate reviews from original research
Ideas in Ecology and Evolution
author_facet Sarah R Supp
Ethan P White
author_sort Sarah R Supp
title Measures of journal quality should separate reviews from original research
title_short Measures of journal quality should separate reviews from original research
title_full Measures of journal quality should separate reviews from original research
title_fullStr Measures of journal quality should separate reviews from original research
title_full_unstemmed Measures of journal quality should separate reviews from original research
title_sort measures of journal quality should separate reviews from original research
publisher Queen's University
series Ideas in Ecology and Evolution
issn 1918-3178
publishDate 2010-09-01
description Metrics of journal quality (e.g., impact factors) are often used to make important judgements regarding journal quality and importance. It is well known that reviews are more highly cited than original research articles. Therefore, it is not surprising that review journals within a field tend to have the highest scores on measures of journal impact/quality. However, many journals publish both reviews and original research, which may lead to a misleading ranking system because published metrics are a mixture of two potentially independent measures with different means. In addition, journals under pressure to increase their impact factors have suggested that changing publication practices to include more reviews is a legitimate manipulation. However, the proportion of reviews published is not directly related to journal quality. Using 20 top ecology journals, we measure the influence of reviews on impact factor and clearly show that the proportion of reviews published by a journal can explain more than 75% of the observed variability in measures of journal quality. We suggest that these measures will be more useful if they are reported separately for articles and reviews. In contrast to other articles published on the problems with impact factors, we suggest a clear, simple solution that could be readily instituted with little change to the existing system.
url https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/IEE/article/view/2386
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