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April 27, 2024 by Gary Price

Preprint: “An Analysis of the Effects of Sharing Research Data, Code, and Preprints on Citations”

April 27, 2024 by Gary Price

The research article (preprint) linked below was recently shared on arXiv.

Title

An Analysis of the Effects of Sharing Research Data, Code, and Preprints on Citations

Authors

Giovanni Colavizza
University of Bologna

Lauren Cadwallader
PLOS

Marcel LaFlamme
PLOS

Grégory Dozot
HEIG-VD

Stéphane Lecorney
HEIG-VD

Daniel Rappo
HEIG-VD

Iain Hrynaszkiewicz
PLOS

Source

via arXiv
arXiv:2404.16171 

Abstract

Calls to make scientific research more open have gained traction with a range of societal stakeholders. Open Science practices include but are not limited to the early sharing of results via preprints and openly sharing outputs such as data and code to make research more reproducible and extensible. Existing evidence shows that adopting Open Science practices has effects in several domains. In this study, we investigate whether adopting one or more Open Science practices leads to significantly higher citations for an associated publication, which is one form of academic impact. We use a novel dataset known as Open Science Indicators, produced by PLOS and DataSeer, which includes all PLOS publications from 2018 to 2023 as well as a comparison group sampled from the PMC Open Access Subset. In total, we analyze circa 122’000 publications. We calculate publication and author-level citation indicators and use a broad set of control variables to isolate the effect of Open Science Indicators on received citations. We show that Open Science practices are adopted to different degrees across scientific disciplines. We find that the early release of a publication as a preprint correlates with a significant positive citation advantage of about 20.2% on average. We also find that sharing data in an online repository correlates with a smaller yet still positive citation advantage of 4.3% on average. However, we do not find a significant citation advantage for sharing code. Further research is needed on additional or alternative measures of impact beyond citations. Our results are likely to be of interest to researchers, as well as publishers, research funders, and policymakers.

Adoption of OSI over time. Each OSI remains adopted by a fraction of publications, but adoption grows over time Source: arXiv:2404.16171 

Direct to Access Full Text Article

Filed under: Companies (Publishers/Vendors), Data Files, News, Open Access, PLOS

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About Gary Price

Gary Price (gprice@gmail.com) is a librarian, writer, consultant, and frequent conference speaker based in the Washington D.C. metro area. He earned his MLIS degree from Wayne State University in Detroit. Price has won several awards including the SLA Innovations in Technology Award and Alumnus of the Year from the Wayne St. University Library and Information Science Program. From 2006-2009 he was Director of Online Information Services at Ask.com.

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