Comparison of journal and top publisher self-citation rates in COVID-19 research.

Publication date: Dec 05, 2024

Journal self-citation contributes to the overall citation count of a journal and to some metrics like the impact factor. However, little is known about the extent of journal self-citations in COVID-19 research. This study aimed to determine the journal self-citations in COVID-19 research and to compare them according to the type of publication and publisher. Data in COVID-19 research extracted from the Web of Science Core Collection 2020-2023 was collected and further analyzed with InCites. The journals with the highest self-citation rates and self-citation per publication were identified. Statistical comparisons were made according to the type of publication and publishers, as well as with other major infectious diseases. The median self-citation rate was 4. 0% (IQR 0-11. 7%), and the median journal self-citation rate was 5. 9% (IQR 0-12. 5%). 1,859 journals (13% of total coverage) had self-citation rates at or above 20%, meaning that more than one in five references are journal self-citations. There was a positive and statistically significant correlation of self-citations with the other indicators, including number of publications, citations, and self-citations per publication (p

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Concepts Keywords
Covid Bibliometrics
Diseases Biomedical Research
Journals Coronavirus Infections
COVID-19
Humans
Journal Impact Factor
Pandemics
Periodicals as Topic
Pneumonia, Viral
Publishing
SARS-CoV-2

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH infectious diseases
disease MESH Long Covid
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
disease MESH Coronavirus Infections
disease MESH Pneumonia Viral

Original Article

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