| Literature DB >> 27835703 |
Brandon K Peoples1, Stephen R Midway2, Dana Sackett3, Abigail Lynch4, Patrick B Cooney5.
Abstract
The relationship between traditional metrics of research impact (e.g., number of citations) and alternative metrics (altmetrics) such as Twitter activity are of great interest, but remain imprecisely quantified. We used generalized linear mixed modeling to estimate the relative effects of Twitter activity, journal impact factor, and time since publication on Web of Science citation rates of 1,599 primary research articles from 20 ecology journals published from 2012-2014. We found a strong positive relationship between Twitter activity (i.e., the number of unique tweets about an article) and number of citations. Twitter activity was a more important predictor of citation rates than 5-year journal impact factor. Moreover, Twitter activity was not driven by journal impact factor; the 'highest-impact' journals were not necessarily the most discussed online. The effect of Twitter activity was only about a fifth as strong as time since publication; accounting for this confounding factor was critical for estimating the true effects of Twitter use. Articles in impactful journals can become heavily cited, but articles in journals with lower impact factors can generate considerable Twitter activity and also become heavily cited. Authors may benefit from establishing a strong social media presence, but should not expect research to become highly cited solely through social media promotion. Our research demonstrates that altmetrics and traditional metrics can be closely related, but not identical. We suggest that both altmetrics and traditional citation rates can be useful metrics of research impact.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27835703 PMCID: PMC5106010 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0166570
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Definitions and summary statistics of variables used in generalized linear mixed models predicting citation rates of ecological research articles.
| Metric | Definition | Average | Standard deviation | Median | Minimum | Maximum |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of tweets | Number of individuals tweets and retweets associated with an article | 5.7 | 14.2 | 2 | 0 | 343 |
| Number of users | The number of individual Twitter accounts that sent tweets/retweets about an article | 5.0 | 11.0 | 2 | 0 | 183 |
| Twitter reach | The number of individual Twitter accounts that potentially viewed tweets associated with an article | 14906 | 55096 | 2110 | 0 | 695914 |
| Time since publication (days) | The number of days between the date on which an article was published and when citation data were collected | 1089 | 337 | 1086 | 455 | 1904 |
| Number of Web of Science citations | The number of articles indexed by Thompson-Reuters Web of Science that cite an article | 11.9 | 12.9 | 8 | 0 | 154 |
Impact factors, number of issues per year, and number of articles sampled from twenty ecological research journals.
| Journal | 5-year impact factor | Number of issues per year | Number of articles sampled |
|---|---|---|---|
| Animal Conservation | 3.2 | 6 | 102 |
| Conservation Letters | 6.4 | 6 | 53 |
| Diversity and Distributions | 5.4 | 12 | 105 |
| Ecological Applications | 5.1 | 8 | 48 |
| Ecology | 6.2 | 12 | 108 |
| Ecology Letters | 16.7 | 12 | 106 |
| Evolution | 5.3 | 12 | 108 |
| Evolutionary Applications | 4.6 | 10 | 74 |
| Fish and Fisheries | 8.1 | 4 | 36 |
| Functional Ecology | 5.3 | 12 | 54 |
| Global Change Biology | 8.7 | 12 | 108 |
| Global Ecology and Biogeography | 7.2 | 12 | 108 |
| Journal of Animal Ecology | 5.3 | 6 | 54 |
| Journal of Applied Ecology | 5.9 | 6 | 54 |
| Journal of Biogeography | 4.6 | 12 | 108 |
| Limnology and Oceanography | 4.4 | 6 | 54 |
| Mammal Review | 4.3 | 4 | 31 |
| Methods in Ecology and Evolution | 7.4 | 12 | 90 |
| Molecular Ecology Resources | 4.9 | 6 | 54 |
| New Phytologist | 7.8 | 16 | 144 |
Fig 1Relative importance (vertical) and standardized effect size (±95% confidence intervals) (horizontal) of 5-year journal impact factor, Twitter reach, number of tweets, and time since publication in generalized linear mixed models predicting the number of Web of Science citations of 1,599 primary ecological research articles published in 20 journals between 2012 and 2014.
Note that relative importance of number of tweets is also 1.0, but is offset to display confidence intervals.
Standardized effect sizes (±standard error) of variables affecting the number of Web of Science citations received by 1,599 primary research articles published in ecology journals between 2012 and 2014.
| Independent variable | Parameter estimate (±standard error) | Relative importance |
|---|---|---|
| 5-year journal impact factor | 0.17±0.13 | 0.42 |
| Number of tweets | 0.07±0.02 | 1.00 |
| Twitter reach | 0.02±0.02 | 0.41 |
| Time since publication | 0.39±0.02 | 1.00 |
Fig 2Model-predicted number of Web of Science citations an article received as a function of (a) the number of tweets about that article and (b) time since the article was published.
The solid black line represents a fitted line from predicted values bounded by standard error (gray).