This paper deals with the role of a journal's publisher country in determining the expected citation rates of the articles published in it. We analyze whether a paper has a higher citation rate when it is published in one of the large publisher nations, the U.S., U.K., or the Netherlands, compared to a hypothetical situation when the same paper is published in journals of different origin. This would constitute a "free lunch," which could be explained by a Matthew effect visible on the country-level, similar to the well-documented Matthew effect on the author-level. We first use a simulation model that highlights increasing citation returns to quality as the central key condition on which such a Matthew effect may emerge. Then we use an int...
The journal Impact factor (IF) is generally accepted to be a good measurement of the relevance/quali...
This paper contains the first empirical applications of a novel methodology for comparing the citati...
A cornerstone of scientific practice is the perceived freedom with which knowledge is disseminated. ...
BACKGROUND: The acceptance of a paper in a top-ranked journal depends on the importance of the study...
BACKGROUND:The acceptance of a paper in a top-ranked journal depends on the importance of the study,...
<div><p>International collaboration is becoming increasingly important for the advancement of scienc...
International collaboration tends to result in more highly cited research, and, partly as a result o...
International audienceDoes online availability boost citations? Using a panel of citations to econom...
Using a large dataset, indexed by Thomson Reuters, consisting of 4.4 million articles published in ...
Does article placement by journal editors influence the number of citations an article receives? Art...
In order to examine potential effects of methodological choices influencing developments in relative...
Purpose of this paper is to examine the global contribution of academics to marketing literature bet...
International audienceThe present study aims to analyze relationship between Citations Normalized Sc...
In this paper, scientific performance is identified with the impact journal articles achieve through...
In this paper, scientific performance is identified with the impact journal articles achieve through...
The journal Impact factor (IF) is generally accepted to be a good measurement of the relevance/quali...
This paper contains the first empirical applications of a novel methodology for comparing the citati...
A cornerstone of scientific practice is the perceived freedom with which knowledge is disseminated. ...
BACKGROUND: The acceptance of a paper in a top-ranked journal depends on the importance of the study...
BACKGROUND:The acceptance of a paper in a top-ranked journal depends on the importance of the study,...
<div><p>International collaboration is becoming increasingly important for the advancement of scienc...
International collaboration tends to result in more highly cited research, and, partly as a result o...
International audienceDoes online availability boost citations? Using a panel of citations to econom...
Using a large dataset, indexed by Thomson Reuters, consisting of 4.4 million articles published in ...
Does article placement by journal editors influence the number of citations an article receives? Art...
In order to examine potential effects of methodological choices influencing developments in relative...
Purpose of this paper is to examine the global contribution of academics to marketing literature bet...
International audienceThe present study aims to analyze relationship between Citations Normalized Sc...
In this paper, scientific performance is identified with the impact journal articles achieve through...
In this paper, scientific performance is identified with the impact journal articles achieve through...
The journal Impact factor (IF) is generally accepted to be a good measurement of the relevance/quali...
This paper contains the first empirical applications of a novel methodology for comparing the citati...
A cornerstone of scientific practice is the perceived freedom with which knowledge is disseminated. ...