• Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Aug 2002

    Impact factor bias and proposed adjustments for its determination.

    • A Fassoulaki, K Papilas, A Paraskeva, and K Patris.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, Aretaieion Hospital, Medical School, University of Athens, Greece. afassou1@otenet.gr
    • Acta Anaesthesiol Scand. 2002 Aug 1; 46 (7): 902-5.

    BackgroundThe impact factor (IF), a qualitative parameter used to evaluate scientific journals, has several flaws. The aim of the study was to evaluate two of its important constraints, journal self-citation and scientific field, and to investigate the potential for improvement.MethodsWe studied the five or six highest impact journals from each of seven medical fields: anesthesiology, dermatology, genetics and heredity, immunology, general and internal medicine, ophthalmology and surgery. To correct for journal self-citation, we divided the number of 1998 citations of papers published in 1996 and 1997, minus the self-citations, by the number of papers published in the same period. For inter-field normalization we divided the IF by the mean of the IFs of the upper quartile for the same category of medical field (IF/fcat).ResultsFor the 36 journals, there was a negative correlation between IF and self-cited and self-citing rates (rs = -0.765, P < 0.001 and rs = -0.479, P < 0.003, respectively). Self-cited rate is the ratio of a journal's self-citations to the number of times it is cited by all journals including itself. Self-citing rate relates a journal's self-citations to the total references it makes. The IF/fcat for the 36 journals are positively correlated with their conventional IF (rs = 0.91, P < 0.001).ConclusionCorrecting the IF of the 36 journals for self-citation did not significantly change journal rankings. The adjusted IF/fcat to normalize for the scientific field was positively correlated with the conventional IF.

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