Web references are not eternal: time-trend and qualitative impact of the loss of access to online resources cited in peer-reviewed medical journals.

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Benjamin Lemaire, Fanélie Bauer, Elena Chaves Rodriguez, Jonathan Ghesquiere, Amandine Radziejwoski, Aurélie Roth, Maud Boyer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: Web resources can contain high-quality data relevant to peer-reviewed medical publications. However, their online location may change or disappear with time. As medical publication professionals, we are concerned with the ephemeral nature of web resources and the associated qualitative impact on publication integrity of referencing such resources.

Methods: Time-dependence of the phenomenon was probed using a dataset of reference lists from open and free access articles published in 2018. Each reference list was manually screened to tally the number of web pages no longer accessible. The analysis was repeated yearly from 2021 to 2023. Additionally, a set of proofs was analyzed to investigate the proportion of cited web references already inaccessible at publication. A third dataset, consisting of modeling articles published in 2018-2023, was used to quantify -at a single timepoint- the share of web resources cited as model inputs that were inaccessible.

Results: The proportion of inaccessible web resources increased on average from 27.2% to 41.9% three to five years post publication (n = 992 articles), respectively. One out of four analyzed proofs cited at least one inaccessible web resource (n = 50). Five years after publication, 26.1% of web resources used as model inputs were no longer accessible, with one in three modeling articles being impacted (n = 61).

Conclusion: The issue of inaccessible web resources cited in peer-reviewed medical publications is of great concern due to the fast pace and potential impact on research reproducibility. These findings call for the definition of best practices involving all stakeholders and the deployment of robust archiving solutions.

网络参考文献不是永恒的:在同行评议的医学期刊中,失去对在线资源的访问的时间趋势和质量影响。
目的:网络资源可以包含与同行评议的医学出版物相关的高质量数据。然而,他们的在线位置可能会随着时间的推移而改变或消失。作为医学出版专业人士,我们关心的是网络资源的短暂性,以及相关的对引用这些资源的出版完整性的定性影响。方法:利用2018年发表的开放和免费获取文献列表数据集,探讨该现象的时间依赖性。每个参考列表都是手动筛选的,以统计不再可访问的网页的数量。该分析从2021年到2023年每年重复一次。此外,还分析了一组证据,以调查被引用的网络参考文献在发表时已无法访问的比例。第三个数据集由2018-2023年发表的建模文章组成,用于在单个时间点量化被引用为无法访问的模型输入的网络资源的份额。结果:文章发表3 ~ 5年后,网络资源不可访问的比例平均从27.2%上升到41.9% (n = 992篇)。四分之一的分析证明引用了至少一个不可访问的网络资源(n = 50)。发表五年后,作为模型输入的26.1%的网络资源不再可访问,三分之一的建模文章受到影响(n = 61)。结论:同行评议医学出版物引用网络资源的速度快,对研究的可重复性有潜在的影响,这是一个值得关注的问题。这些发现要求定义涉及所有利益相关者的最佳实践,并部署可靠的存档解决方案。
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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来源期刊
Current Medical Research and Opinion
Current Medical Research and Opinion 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
4.30%
发文量
247
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Current Medical Research and Opinion is a MEDLINE-indexed, peer-reviewed, international journal for the rapid publication of original research on new and existing drugs and therapies, Phase II-IV studies, and post-marketing investigations. Equivalence, safety and efficacy/effectiveness studies are especially encouraged. Preclinical, Phase I, pharmacoeconomic, outcomes and quality of life studies may also be considered if there is clear clinical relevance
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