| Literature DB >> 29456894 |
Heather Piwowar1, Jason Priem1, Vincent Larivière2,3, Juan Pablo Alperin4,5, Lisa Matthias6, Bree Norlander7,8, Ashley Farley7,8, Jevin West7, Stefanie Haustein3,9.
Abstract
Despite growing interest in Open Access (OA) to scholarly literature, there is an unmet need for large-scale, up-to-date, and reproducible studies assessing the prevalence and characteristics of OA. We address this need using oaDOI, an open online service that determines OA status for 67 million articles. We use three samples, each of 100,000 articles, to investigate OA in three populations: (1) all journal articles assigned a Crossref DOI, (2) recent journal articles indexed in Web of Science, and (3) articles viewed by users of Unpaywall, an open-source browser extension that lets users find OA articles using oaDOI. We estimate that at least 28% of the scholarly literature is OA (19M in total) and that this proportion is growing, driven particularly by growth in Gold and Hybrid. The most recent year analyzed (2015) also has the highest percentage of OA (45%). Because of this growth, and the fact that readers disproportionately access newer articles, we find that Unpaywall users encounter OA quite frequently: 47% of articles they view are OA. Notably, the most common mechanism for OA is not Gold, Green, or Hybrid OA, but rather an under-discussed category we dub Bronze: articles made free-to-read on the publisher website, without an explicit Open license. We also examine the citation impact of OA articles, corroborating the so-called open-access citation advantage: accounting for age and discipline, OA articles receive 18% more citations than average, an effect driven primarily by Green and Hybrid OA. We encourage further research using the free oaDOI service, as a way to inform OA policy and practice.Entities:
Keywords: Bibliometrics; Libraries; Open access; Open science; Publishing; Scholarly communication; Science policy; Scientometrics
Year: 2018 PMID: 29456894 PMCID: PMC5815332 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.4375
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Accuracy of the prototype version of the oaDOI service used in this study.
| oaDOI reports Open | oaDOI reports Closed | Manual count Total (ground truth) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Open | 144 | 43 | 187 |
| Closed | 5 | 308 | 313 |
| Total | 149 | 351 | 500 |
Summary of samples used in this study.
| Sample name | Sample size | Population sampled | Purpose | Population size |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crossref-DOIs | 100,000 | All journal articles with Crossref DOIs, all years. | Estimate percentage of the literature that is OA. | 66,560,153 |
| WoS-DOIs | 100,000 | All citable WoS articles with DOIs, 2009–2015. | Estimate citation impact of recent OA papers, and also OA prevalence by discipline. | 8,083,613 |
| Unpaywall-DOIs | 100,000 | All articles accessed by Unpaywall users over a 1-week period in 2017. | Estimate percentage of OA experienced by users of the Unpaywall extension. | 213,323 |
Figure 1Percent of articles by OA status, Crossref-DOIs sample vs Unpaywall-DOIs sample.
Percent of the literature that is OA, by type, in three samples of 100,000 journal articles, with 95% confidence intervals.
| Access type | Crossref-DOI All journal articles with Crossref DOIs, all years. (“Articles with DOIs” in | WoS-DOIs All citable WoS articles with DOIs, 2009–2015 | Unpaywall-DOIs All articles accessed by Unpaywall users over a 1-week period in 2017 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimate | 95% CI | Estimate | 95% CI | Estimate | 95% CI | |
| OA (all types) | 27.9% | 27.6–28.2 | 36.1% | 36.0–36.2 | 47.0% | 46.7–47.3 |
| Bronze OA | 16.2% | 16.0–16.5 | 12.9% | 12.6–13.2 | 15.3% | 15.0–15.6 |
| Hybrid OA | 3.6% | 3.3–3.9 | 4.3% | 4.0–4.6 | 8.3% | 8.0–8.6 |
| Gold OA | 3.2% | 2.9–3.5 | 7.4% | 7.1–7.7 | 14.3% | 14.0–14.6 |
| Green OA | 4.8% | 4.5–5.1 | 11.5% | 11.2–11.8 | 9.1% | 8.8–9.4 |
| Closed | 72.0% | 71.8–72.4 | 63.9% | 63.8–64.0 | 53.0% | 52.7–53.3 |
Figure 2Number of articles (A) and proportion of articles (B) with OA copies, estimated based on a random sample of 100,000 articles with Crossref DOIs.
Figure 3Number (A) and proportion (B) of articles with OA copies, by publisher, for the 20 most prolific publishers. Based on sample of 27,894 Crossref DOI-assigned articles published between 2009–2015.
Figure 4Percentage of different access types of a random sample of WoS articles and reviews with a DOI published between 2009 and 2015 per NSF discipline (excluding Arts and Humanities).
Figure 5Average relative citations of different access types of a random sample of WoS articles and reviews with a DOI published between 2009 and 2015.
Figure 6Percentage and impact of different access types of a random sample of WoS articles and reviews with a DOI, by year of publication.