How has the dental literature evolved over time? Analyzing 20 years of journal self-citation rates and impact factors

Authors

  • Konstantina Delli Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands
  • Christos Livas Department of Orthodontics, Academic Centre for Dentistry Amsterdam (ACTA), University of Amsterdam and VU University Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
  • Pieter U. Dijkstra Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands; Department of Rehabilitation, Center for Rehabilitation, University of Groningen, University Medical Center, Groningen, The Netherlands

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1080/00016357.2019.1685681

Keywords:

Dentistry, bibliometrics, impact factor, self-citation

Abstract

Objective: As journal impact factors (IFs) can be artificially inflated by excessive journal self-citation practices, research quality evaluation based solely on IF ranking may be manipulated and, therefore, ethically challenged. This study aimed to analyze the longitudinal development of journal self-citation rates (SCRs) and IFs in dental literature and to determine possible confounders.

Methods: Twenty-eight journals with scope within general dentistry and (sub)specialties listed in 1997–2016 Journal of Citation Reports® were scrutinized. The following information was retrieved: publication year, total number of citations, number of self-citations, IF, corrected IF, and SCR.

Results: Endodontic journals had the highest SCR (median = 35.3, IQR = 21.6–47.5), journals related to periodontics had the lowest (median = 14.7, IQR = 8.9–25.5). Periodontics had the highest IF (median = 2.1, IQR= 1.7–2.8) and general dentistry had the lowest (median = 0.9, IQR = 0.7–1.2). SCR significantly decreased over time (p < .0001) by 1 unit per year. Additionally, 1 unit increase in corrected IF resulted in 15.2 units decrease in SCR. IFs significantly increased 0.06 units per year (p < .000).

Conclusions: Overall, favourable changes in citation metrics have been observed for dental journals during the 20-year observation period. SCR significantly decreased per observation year whereas IFs significantly increased, indicating a healthy publishing environment in the dental literature. SCR was regulated both by time and corrected IF.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Additional Files

Published

2020-04-02