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Why are coauthored academic articles more cited: Higher quality or larger audience?

Authors :
Thelwall, Mike
Kousha, Kayvan
Abdoli, Mahshid
Stuart, Emma
Makita, Meiko
Wilson, Paul
Levitt, Jonathan
Source :
Journal of the Association for Information Science & Technology; Jul2023, Vol. 74 Issue 7, p791-810, 20p, 2 Charts, 10 Graphs
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Collaboration is encouraged because it is believed to improve academic research, supported by indirect evidence in the form of more coauthored articles being more cited. Nevertheless, this might not reflect quality but increased self‐citations or the "audience effect": citations from increased awareness through multiple author networks. We address this with the first science wide investigation into whether author numbers associate with journal article quality, using expert peer quality judgments for 122,331 articles from the 2014–20 UK national assessment. Spearman correlations between author numbers and quality scores show moderately strong positive associations (0.2–0.4) in the health, life, and physical sciences, but weak or no positive associations in engineering and social sciences, with weak negative/positive or no associations in various arts and humanities, and a possible negative association for decision sciences. This gives the first systematic evidence that greater numbers of authors associates with higher quality journal articles in the majority of academia outside the arts and humanities, at least for the UK. Positive associations between team size and citation counts in areas with little association between team size and quality also show that audience effects or other nonquality factors account for the higher citation rates of coauthored articles in some fields. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23301635
Volume :
74
Issue :
7
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of the Association for Information Science & Technology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
164116226
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/asi.24755