Altmetrics in Plastic Surgery Journals: Does It Correlate With Citation Count?

2020 ◽  
Vol 40 (11) ◽  
pp. NP628-NP635 ◽  
Author(s):  
Malke Asaad ◽  
Skyler M Howell ◽  
Aashish Rajesh ◽  
Jesse Meaike ◽  
Nho V Tran

Abstract Background Altmetrics (alternative metrics) have become one of the most commonly utilized metrics to track the impact of research articles across electronic and social media platforms. Objectives The goal of this study was to identify whether the Altmetric Attention Score (AAS) is a good proxy for citation counts and whether it can be employed as an accurate measure to complement the current gold standard. Methods The authors conducted a citation analysis of all articles published in 6 plastic surgery journals during the 2016 calendar year. Citation counts and AAS were abstracted and analyzed. Results A total of 1420 articles were identified. The mean AAS was 11 and the median AAS was 1. The journal with the highest mean AAS was Aesthetic Surgery Journal (31), followed by Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery (19). A weak positive correlation was identified (r = 0.33, P < .0001) between AAS and citations. Articles in the top 1% in terms of citation counts showed strong positive correlation between AAS and citation counts (r = 0.64, P = .01). On the contrary, articles in the top 1% of AAS had no significant correlation with citation counts (r = −0.31, P = .29). Conclusions Overall correlation between citations and AAS was weak, and therefor AAS may not be an accurate early predictor of future citations. The 2 metrics seem to measure different aspects of the impact of scholarly work and should be utilized in tandem for determining the reach of a scientific article.

PeerJ ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. e1887 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel R. Shanahan

Background.The Journal Citation Reports journal impact factors (JIFs) are widely used to rank and evaluate journals, standing as a proxy for the relative importance of a journal within its field. However, numerous criticisms have been made of use of a JIF to evaluate importance. This problem is exacerbated when the use of JIFs is extended to evaluate not only the journals, but the papers therein. The purpose of this study was therefore to investigate the relationship between the number of citations and journal IF for identical articles published simultaneously in multiple journals.Methods.Eligible articles were consensus research reporting statements listed on the EQUATOR Network website that were published simultaneously in three or more journals. The correlation between the citation count for each article and the median journal JIF over the published period, and between the citation count and number of article accesses was calculated for each reporting statement.Results.Nine research reporting statements were included in this analysis, representing 85 articles published across 58 journals in biomedicine. The number of citations was strongly correlated to the JIF for six of the nine reporting guidelines, with moderate correlation shown for the remaining three guidelines (medianr= 0.66, 95% CI [0.45–0.90]). There was also a strong positive correlation between the number of citations and the number of article accesses (medianr= 0.71, 95% CI [0.5–0.8]), although the number of data points for this analysis were limited. When adjusted for the individual reporting guidelines, each logarithm unit of JIF predicted a median increase of 0.8 logarithm units of citation counts (95% CI [−0.4–5.2]), and each logarithm unit of article accesses predicted a median increase of 0.1 logarithm units of citation counts (95% CI [−0.9–1.4]). This model explained 26% of the variance in citations (median adjustedr2= 0.26, range 0.18–1.0).Conclusion.The impact factor of the journal in which a reporting statement was published was shown to influence the number of citations that statement will gather over time. Similarly, the number of article accesses also influenced the number of citations, although to a lesser extent than the impact factor. This demonstrates that citation counts are not purely a reflection of scientific merit and the impact factor is, in fact, auto-correlated.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 427-448 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daphne Halikiopoulou ◽  
Tim Vlandas

AbstractThis article contests the view that the strong positive correlation between anti-immigration attitudes and far right party success necessarily constitutes evidence in support of the cultural grievance thesis. We argue that the success of far right parties depends on their ability to mobilize a coalition of interests between their core supporters, that is voters with cultural grievances over immigration and the often larger group of voters with economic grievances over immigration. Using individual level data from eight rounds of the European Social Survey, our empirical analysis shows that while cultural concerns over immigration are a stronger predictor of far right party support, those who are concerned with the impact of immigration on the economy are important to the far right in numerical terms. Taken together, our findings suggest that economic grievances over immigration remain pivotal within the context of the transnational cleavage.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregg Murray ◽  
Rebecca Hellen ◽  
James Ralph ◽  
Siona Ni Raghallaigh

BACKGROUND Research impact has traditionally been measured using citation count and impact factor (IF). Academics have long relied heavily on this form of metric system to measure a publication’s impact. A higher number of citations is viewed as an indicator of the importance of the research and a marker for the impact of the publishing journal. Recently, social media and online news sources have become important avenues for dissemination of research, resulting in the emergence of an alternative metric system known as altmetrics. OBJECTIVE We assessed the correlation between altmetric attention score (AAS) and traditional scientific impact markers, namely journal IF and article citation count, for all the dermatology journal and published articles of 2017. METHODS We identified dermatology journals and their associated IFs available in 2017 using InCites Journal Citation Reports. We entered all 64 official dermatology journals into Altmetric Explorer, a Web-based platform that enables users to browse and report on all attention data for every piece of scholarly content for which Altmetric Explorer has found attention. RESULTS For the 64 dermatology journals, there was a moderate positive correlation between journal IF and journal AAS (<i>r<sub>s</sub></i>=.513, <i>P</i>&lt;.001). In 2017, 6323 articles were published in the 64 dermatology journals. Our data show that there was a weak positive correlation between the traditional article citation count and AAS (<i>r<sub>s</sub></i>=.257, <i>P</i>&lt;.001). CONCLUSIONS Our data show a weak correlation between article citation count and AAS. Temporal factors may explain this weak association. Newer articles may receive increased online attention after publication, while it may take longer for scientific citation counts to accumulate. Stories that are at times deemed newsworthy and then disseminated across the media and social media platforms border on sensationalism and may not be truly academic in nature. The opposite can also be true.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 54
Author(s):  
Sandra Rogers ◽  
Theresa A. Gaffney ◽  
Eileen Caulfield

Background and objective: Collaboration is an important and necessary skill to function effectively within the practice of nursing and inter-professional teams. The purpose of this pilot study was to examine the impact of collaborative testing on nursing student content retention and student perception of the collaborative testing process.Methods: A convenience sample of nursing students (n = 95) were grouped in random pairs and permitted to collaborate on exam 3 (of 5) in an entry level medical surgical nursing course. Students were surveyed with the 13-item survey, Student Evaluation of Collaborative Testing, after the collaborative exam.Results and conclusions: There was a strong, positive correlation between students’ exam 3 grades and the number of correct responses to exam 3 content items on the final exam, r = .511, p < .001. For every one-point increase on exam 3 grades, the number of correct responses on exam 3 content on the final exam increased by .511. As such, students who scored higher on exam 3 also had more correct responses to exam 3 content on the final exam. There was a strong, positive correlation between students’ exam 3 and final exam scores, r = .536, p < .001. It may (or may not) be the case that students’ who perceived collaborative learning more positively were more impacted by the collaborative learning experience, resulting in higher scores on the final exam.


2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 132-136
Author(s):  
Olivia M Perotti ◽  
Storm Holwill ◽  
Sadhishaan Sreedharan ◽  
Daniel J Reilly ◽  
Warren M Rozen ◽  
...  

Background: Bibliometrics is the analysis of research produced by individuals and institutions. While previous analyses have assessed sub-specialty fields, as well as contributions of individual countries to the plastic surgical literature, no bibliometric analyses to date have measured the contribution of plastic surgeons from Australia and New Zealand.Methods: Plastic surgery journals with the 15 highest impact factors were identified. Total publications in a ten-year period from October 2007 to September 2017 by Australian and New Zealand Plastic Surgeons were recorded, as were h-indices for all surgeons.Results: 588 articles were published by 498 surgeons, with the largest numbers in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery (142), Burns (133), and the Journal of Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgery (112). Mean h-index for Associate Professors was 9.29, and for Professors was 17.17.Conclusion: Australian and New Zealand plastic surgeons continue to be actively involved in world-class research and innovation. The volume and quantity of research produced supports the development of an Australasian Journal of Plastic Surgery.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 2878-2878
Author(s):  
Grazyna Stasiak ◽  
Malgorzata Zajac ◽  
Joanna Zaleska ◽  
Michal Kielbus ◽  
Jakub Czapinski ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) represents a heterogeneous group of myeloid malignancies harboring different chromosomal abnormalities, gene mutations, and epigenetic modifications. Recent clinical and biological studies indicate that myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and AML could be considered as part of the same continuous disease spectrum rather than as distinct disorders. NPM1 is a multifunctional protein involved in both biological and pathological processes controlling development, cell proliferation, ribosome biogenesis, transformation and genomic stability. It interacts with many cellular proteins, including ARF and the tumor suppressor p53. Recently, we found that high expression of the NPM1 splice variant R2, which encodes a truncated form of NPM1, may provide prognostic value for CN-AML patients. Aims Therefore, our aim was evaluation of NPM1 R2 splice variant significance for MDS and sAML cases, as well as assignment if different expression levels of R2 might have influence on the expression pattern of each of the components of the ARF-MDM2-p53-p21 signaling pathway and additional downstream molecules (miR-34a, miR-34b and miR-34c). In order to determine the impact of NPM1 R2 on NPM1 localization and to compare it with the NPM1mut effect, transfection analyses and IHC stainings were performed. Methods NPM1 R2, CDKN2A (encoding ARF), MDM2, TP53 and CDKN1A(encoding p21) genes expression levels were assessed for 128 samples (58 AML, 62 MDS and 8 sAML) using qRT-PCR. Additionally, expression level of miR-34a (n=29), miR-34b (n=20) and miR-34c (n=20) was measured in CD33+ cells derived from AML patient samples. WI-38 fibroblasts and HEK-293 cells were transfected with constructs containing eGFP-tagged NPM1-R2, NPM1-mut and NPM1-wt under a cytomegalovirus promoter, stained and visualized with confocal microscope. Immunochemistry analysis was performed for NPM1 in 23 AML bone marrow smears. Results NPM1 R2 expression levels differed between AML, sAML, MDS and healthy volunteers (HV) groups and were significantly higher in AML, sAML and MDS groups compared to HVs (median 0.023 vs 0.005, p<0.001, 0.025 vs 0.005, p<0.001 and 0.017 vs 0.005, p<0.001, respectively). CDKN2A, MDM2, TP53 and CDKN1A expression analysis in these sample groups showed also significant differences. Expression of TP53 was elevated in groups with high R2 expression in comparison to groups with low R2 expression in AML and MDS patients (median 0.01 vs 0.005, p<0.001 and 0.007 vs 0.004, p<0.001, respectively). Moreover, we found strong positive correlation of R2 expression with TP53 expression in AML (r=0.77, p<0.001) and MDS (r=0.68, p<0.001). We observed elevated expression of miR-34c in HVs group compared to AML (0.11 vs 0.07, p<0,001) and trend to decreased expression of miR-34a in AML in comparison with HVs. No differences were found in miR-34a, miR-34b and miR-34c expression between groups with high or low R2 expression. Transfection analyses showed various localization of each eGFP-tagged NPM1 forms. NPM1-wt localized mainly in nucleoli, NPM1-R2 was detected in the nucleoplasm and nucleoli, whereas eGFP-NPM1-mut displayed cytoplasmic localization. However, the IHC stainings for AML samples revealed that in cases with high R2 expression we were able to determine a cytoplasmic localization of NPM1 even in the absence of its concomitant mutation. Conclusions The elevated level of NPM1 R2 splice variant in AML, sAML and MDS groups versus HVs suggests that R2 might play some role in neoplasia process also in early stages of this hematological malignancy. Transfection analyses established that NPM1 R2 mostly localizes in the nucleoplasm, where it might interact with other proteins e.g. ARF and p53. Nucleolar localization of this NPM1 form might be determined both by lack of nucleolar localization signal present in the wt form of NPM1 and nuclear export signal occurring in mutated NPM1. Moreover, strong positive correlation between R2 and TP53 expression was found in AML and MDS groups suggesting biological link between these transcripts. In summary, the expression of NPM1 R2 might be of biological importance for AML as well as for transformation of MDS into sAML. This work was supported by National Centre for Science Grant HARMONIA (UMO-2013/10/M/NZ5/00313). Disclosures Grzasko: Celgene: Honoraria; Munipharma: Honoraria; Janssen: Honoraria.


Author(s):  
Elham Ezeldeen Hassan, Naamat Muhammad Saeed

The study dealt with the relationship of electronic service and electronic pricing in attracting customers by applying to the Sudanese banking sector The problem of the study lies in identifying the relationship between electronic service and electronic pricing in attracting customers by identifying the quality of the correlation between electronic service and electronic pricing and attracting customers and the importance of the study stemmed from The big role that banks play in providing financial services in Sudan and through information and data and analyzing them to benefit from them, and the main goal of this study is to try to reveal the impact of electronic marketing My clients in the bank attract, the study seeks to test the following hypotheses of the study, there is a strong positive correlation with statistical function between the electronic service and attract customers, and there is a positive correlation relationship with a medium statistical function between the electronic pricing and attract customers. The study followed the historical approach, deductive approach, descriptive approach and inductive approach, the study reached a number of results, the most important of which is that providing good electronic service is no longer optional or a set of slogans and methods of advertising but rather has become a reality imposed by the nature of conditions and variables in the contemporary business environment as imposed by the nature and characteristics of clients themselves, the basis To achieve success, growth and continuity in the market depends on the presence of a customer base and the strengthening of the relationship between customers and the bank, and one of the most important recommendations recommended by the study is the establishment of sections for electronic banking services in the bank’s branches and the establishment of an ester Tejah marketing is working to attract more of both cases, customers continuity in the creation of the bank's branches and improve the work, the use of modern software in the electronic service to keep pace with technological developments, taking into account security and safety in the payment of the amounts of buying and selling via computer networks because of concerns arising from the possibility of interception and theft.


2020 ◽  
pp. 175114372090324 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel J Lehane ◽  
Colin S Black

Introduction Social media is increasingly used in the dissemination of medical research. Traditional measures of the impact of a paper do not account for this. Altmetrics are a measure of the dissemination of a publication via social media websites. The purpose of this study is to ascertain if the altmetric attention score of an article is a reliable measure of the impact it has in the field of critical care medicine. To this end, we investigated if a correlation exists between future citation count and altmetric attention score. Methods The top nine journals by impact factor in the field of critical care medicine were identified for 2014 and 2015. The 100 most cited articles from these journals were recorded to form the Scientific Impact Group, i.e. those with the greatest impact on the scientific community. The altmetric attention score was recorded for each article. The top 100 articles by altmetric attention score were also identified to form the Media Impact Group, i.e. those that generated the most online attention. Their citation counts’ were recorded. Statistical analysis was performed on each group to identify a correlation between altmetric attention score and citation count. Results There was a moderately positive correlation in the Scientific Impact Group, with a Spearman r score of 0.4336 ( P = 0.0001). A weakly positive correlation was found in the Media Impact Group, with a Spearman r score of 0.3033 ( P = 0.002). Conclusions There is a positive correlation between traditional bibliographic metrics and altmetrics in the field of critical care medicine. Highly cited papers are more likely to generate online attention. However, papers that generate a lot of online attention are less likely to have a high citation count. Therefore, altmetric attention score is not a reliable predictor of future citation count in critical care medicine.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 2494
Author(s):  
Magdalena Iorga ◽  
Raluca Iurcov ◽  
Lavinia-Maria Pop

Various studies have shown the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on mental health, identifying that people with a strong fear of getting infected are more prone to become stressed, depressed, anxious and to experience sleeping disturbance. The present study focuses on the impact of fear of COVID-19 and its relationship with insomnia among dentists. 83 dentists from public and private clinics were included in the research. A questionnaire was especially constructed for this study, consisting of three parts: the first part gathered socio-demographic and medical data, and a succession of self-rated items collected opinions about lockdown and preventive behaviors; the second part evaluated the level of fear of infection with Coronavirus-19 using the Fear of Covid 19 Scale; the third part investigated the presence of insomnia using the Athens Insomnia Scale. Collected data were processed using SPSS (v. 25). The total scores for fear of COVID 19 and insomnia were assessed. A strong positive correlation was identified between the total score of AIS and the total score of FCV-19S. The fear of COVID-19 had a significant positive correlation with the practice of several preventive behaviors. Dentists with chronic diseases were found to be more prone to suffer from insomnia than healthy dentists. Significant differences between women and men in terms of night symptoms were discussed. The findings are useful for dentists and policy makers to evaluate the impact of fear of infection on mental health status.


2021 ◽  
Vol 92 (11) ◽  
pp. 908-912
Author(s):  
Heikki Mansikka ◽  
Kai Virtanen ◽  
Lauri Mäkinen ◽  
Don Harris

BACKGROUND: Normative performance (NP) describes the pilots adherence to tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs). Until now, there has not been a global NP measurement technique for beyond visual range (BVR) air combat, and the methodology and technology related to the evaluation of NP have fallen behind the pace of the overall technical progress of distributed mission operations (DMO) training.METHODS: Platform-independent core air combat tasks were identified. The execution of these tasks is directed with TTPs. BVR air combat missions were flown in a DMO simulator system and the design NP was varied between missions. Observers viewed debriefs of these missions and attempted to identify TTP-regulated air combat tasks. Once identified, they scored the pilots NP in those tasks. The scoring was based on the level of TTP adherence and the impact a nonadherence had on the mission accomplishment.RESULTS: All observers were able to identify most of the TTP-regulated air combat tasks. There was a strong positive correlation between the observed and design NP scores. The overall Kappa indicated a fair agreement between the observers. The percentage of observers NP assessments which agreed with the design NP varied from 49.60 to 85.28% in different air combat missions. On average, 73.9%6 of the observers NP scores agreed with the design NP scores.CONCLUSIONS: Observers were able to accurately identify TTP-regulated tasks and score NP of these tasks during an air combat debrief. There was a moderate agreement between the observers NP scores.Mansikka H, Virtanen K, Mkinen L, Harris D. Normative performance measurement in simulated air combat. Aerosp Med Hum Perform. 2021; 92(11):908-912.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document