The Impact of Preprints on the Citations of Journal Articles Related to COVID-19

Hiroyuki Tsunoda, Yuan Sun, Masaki Nishizawa, Xiaomin Liu, Kou Amano, Rie Kominami
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Abstract

To investigate the impact of preprints on the citation counts of COVID-19-related papers, this study compares the number of citations received by drafts initially distributed as preprints and later published in journals with those received by pa-pers directly submitted to journals. The difference in the median number of cita-tions between COVID-19 preprint-distributed papers and COVID-19 directly submitted papers published in 184 journals was tested using the Mann-Whitney U test. The results showed that 129 journals had a statistically significant higher median citation count for COVID-19 preprint-distributed papers compared to di-rectly submitted papers, with a p-value of less than 0.05. In contrast, no journals had a statistically significant higher median citation count for COVID-19 directly submitted papers. This indicates that 70.11% of the journals that published pre-print-distributed papers experienced a significant increase in citations. We also identified that among the 184 journals, 13 journals garnered a substantial number of citations. Among the 74,037 COVID-19 papers, preprint-distributed papers (9,028) accounted for only 12.19%. However, among the 2,015,997 citations re-ceived by COVID-19 papers, preprint-distributed papers garnered 542,715 cita-tions, representing a substantial 26.92%. These results suggest that distributing preprints prior to formal publication may help COVID-19 research reach a wider audience, potentially leading to increased readership and citations.
预印本对 COVID-19 相关期刊论文引用的影响
为了研究预印本对 COVID-19 相关论文被引次数的影响,本研究比较了最初以预印本形式发布、后来在期刊上发表的论文与直接投稿给期刊的论文所获得的被引次数。采用曼-惠特尼U检验法检验了COVID-19预印本论文与COVID-19直接投稿论文在184种期刊上发表的引用次数中位数的差异。结果显示,与直接投稿论文相比,129 种期刊的 COVID-19 预印本分发论文的中位引用次数显著高于直接投稿论文,P 值小于 0.05。相比之下,没有任何期刊的 COVID-19 直接投稿论文的引用次数中位数在统计意义上明显更高。这表明,在发表预发表论文的期刊中,有 70.11% 的期刊的论文被引用次数显著增加。我们还发现,在 184 种期刊中,有 13 种期刊获得了大量引用。在 74,037 篇 COVID-19 论文中,预发表论文(9,028 篇)仅占 12.19%。然而,在COVID-19论文获得的2,015,997次引用中,预印本分发论文获得了542,715次引用,占比高达26.92%。这些结果表明,在正式发表之前分发预印本可能有助于 COVID-19 研究获得更广泛的受众,从而有可能增加读者数量和引用次数。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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