Journal
JOURNAL OF INFORMETRICS
Volume 15, Issue 4, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.joi.2021.101221
Keywords
Journal self-citation; journal impact factor; self-citation patterns of journals; impact factor manipulation
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The research found that the rankings of high-impact factor journals are not affected by self-citation rates, but for other journals, even the removal of a single self-citation can lead to significant rank changes. Self-citation patterns are common in local language journals and journals from upper-middle-income European countries. It is important to use impact factors more carefully in research performance evaluations, especially when variables such as journal size, publication language, publisher country, and subject area are correlated with self-citation rates.
Self-citation patterns of 1,104 journals indexed in the 2018 edition of the Journal Citation Reports were examined to assess the possibility of underlying rank manipulations. The journals included in this study were all found to have a self-citation rate of more than 25%. Our research shows that by excluding self-citation rates, the rank of journals with a high impact factor are not affected; however, for other journals, the removal of even a single self-citation can cause significant rank changes. Self-citation patterns are typical for local language journals as well as journals from upper-middle-income European countries. Impact factors used in research performance evaluations should be used more carefully, particularly when variables such as journal size, publication language, publisher country, and subject area correlate with self-citation rates.
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