4.5 Article

Understanding researchers' Twitter uptake, activity and popularity-an analysis of applied research in Germany

Journal

SCIENTOMETRICS
Volume 128, Issue 1, Pages 325-344

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11192-022-04569-2

Keywords

Twitter; Research dissemination; Citation impact; Altmetrics; academic conference

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Social media opens up new avenues for research dissemination. This study investigates the factors that affect researchers' engagement on Twitter, such as research productivity, research quality, participation in academic conferences, and academic discipline. Using data from researchers at Europe's largest applied research organization, Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft, the study finds that participation in academic conferences is strongly associated with Twitter uptake and popularity. There are also positive relationships between research productivity/research quality and Twitter uptake/popularity, and variations in Twitter usage among disciplines, genders, and scientific age.
Social media is opening up new avenues for disseminating research outputs. While prior literature points to the essential role of Twitter in this context, evidence on what determines variation in researchers ' Twitter engagement remains scarce. In this account-level study of Twitter usage, we consider how research productivity, research quality, and participation in academic conferences relate to Twitter uptake, activity and popularity, while also taking into account differences between academic disciplines. We use a population sample comprising data on Twitter engagement of researchers employed at the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft, Europe ' s largest applied research organization. We find that participation in academic conferences is strongly associated with Twitter uptake and popularity, but not with Twitter activity as such. We also find positive associations between research productivity and Twitter uptake as well as between research quality and popularity. Moreover, physicists use Twitter more than researchers from other disciplines, female researchers use Twitter less, and scientific age is negatively associated with Twitter activity. Our findings contribute to the literature on academic social media usage by providing indications for both push and pull mechanisms at play within social media research dissemination.

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