RSS 1.0 Feed
RSS 2.0 Feed
Atom Feed
 

Evaluating Research Impact through Open Access to Scholarly Communication

Brody, T. (2006) Evaluating Research Impact through Open Access to Scholarly Communication. PhD thesis, University of Southampton.

Download

[img]
Preview
PDF
2077Kb
[img]Other
Restricted to Access restricted to members of ECS

1649Kb

Abstract

Scientific research is a competitive business – in order to secure funding, promotion and tenure researchers must demonstrate their work has impact in their field. To maximise impact researchers undertake high priority research, aim to get results first, and publish in the highest impact journals. The Internet now presents a new opportunity to the scholarly author seeking higher impact: s/he can now make their work instantly accessible on the Web through author self-archiving. This growing body of open access literature (coupled with new publishing models that make journals available for-free to the reader) maximises research impact by maximising the number of people who can read it, and making it available sooner. Open access also provides a new opportunity for bibliometric research. This thesis describes the relatively recent phenomenon of open access to research literature, tools that were built to collect and analyse that literature, and the results of analyses of the effect of open access and its effect on author behaviour. It
shows that articles self-archived by authors receive between 50-250% more citations, that rapid pre-printing on the Web has dramatically reduced the peak citation rate from over a year to virtually instant and how citation-impact – now widely used for evaluation – can be expanded to include a new web metric of download impact.

Creators:Timothy Brody
Item Type:Thesis
Research Group:Intelligence, Agents, Multimedia
Deposited On:14 Jan 2007 by Brody, Timothy
ID Code:13313
Last Modified:11 Nov 2009 12:30

Tools

Metadata

Download Statistics

Last month

Last year

Members of ECS may view the download statistics dashboard for this record.

Corrections

ECS staff and postgraduates may modify this record

  Welcome from Deputy Head of School (Research) Research Prospectus Industrial Partnerships New Research Students Notes for Guidance New Research Students Notes for Guidance
The ECS EPrints Repository supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

EPrints is free software developed by the University of Southampton to facilitate Open Access to research.
EPrints