Impact of academic authorship characteristics on article citations

Otto, P. and Otto, P. (2022) Impact of academic authorship characteristics on article citations. Revstat Statistical Journal, 20(4), pp. 427-447. (doi: 10.57805/revstat.v20i4.382)

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Abstract

Scientific self-evaluation practices are increasingly built on citation counts. Citation practices for the top journals in economics, psychology, and statistics illustrate article characteristics that influence citation frequencies. Citation counts differ between the investigated disciplines, with economics attracting the most citations and statistics the least. Although articles in statistics are cited less frequently, its proportion of uncited articles is the smallest of all three disciplines. Academic authorship characteristics clearly influence the number of citations. Having authors alphabetically ordered, a practice differently present in the investigated disciplines, increases citations. Further, the more authors there are, the more the article is cited, and a first author with a common surname has positive effects on citation counts, whereas two or more authors sharing a surname attracts fewer citations. In addition, the shorter the article’s title, the higher the number of citations.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Otto, Dr Philipp
Authors: Otto, P., and Otto, P.
College/School:College of Science and Engineering > School of Mathematics and Statistics > Statistics
Journal Name:Revstat Statistical Journal
Publisher:Instituto Nacional de Estatística
ISSN:1645-6726
ISSN (Online):2183-0371
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2020 REVSTAT-Statistical Journal
First Published:First published in Revstat Statistical Journal 20(4):427-447
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons license

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