Bibliometric Analysis of AANS/CNS Joint Section on Tumors (JST) Award Recipients

Pub Date : 2023-04-17 DOI:10.5530/jscires.12.1.006
Addison Quinones, Eugene I. Hrabarchuk, A. Schupper, Vikram Vasan, Jonathan T. Dullea, Connor Berger, Adam Y. Li, L. McCarthy, John R. Durbin, Muhammad Ali, Roshini Kalagara, Zerubabbel K. Asfaw, Lisa Genadry, William H. Shuman, Theodore C. Hannah, T. Choudhri
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Abstract

The AANS/CNS Joint Section on Tumors (JST) awards are given for tumor research and clinical achievements. Associations between scholarly awards and academic productivity in neurosurgery have not been thoroughly investigated. We explore associations between JST awards and measures of academic productivity to evaluate the relationship between scholarly output, fellowship training, and awarded recognition. Demographic information was collected from public data of 1671 academic neurosurgeons comprising 115 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education accredited institutions. h -index was queried from Scopus. The mean-Relative Citation Ratio (RCR) and weighted-RCR were gathered from the NIH iCite database from 2002-2020. JST award reception was determined from the JST official resource. RCR, h -index, and NIH funding were compared between neurosurgeons who received JST awards and those who did not, using multivariable linear regression. Analysis showed w-RCR was higher among award recipients (β=15.02; 95% CI:4.741,25.29; p <0.01), while m-RCR was not significantly different (β=-0.049, 95%CI 0.2214,0.1238; p =0.5336). h -index was higher among award winners (β=2.155; 95% CI 1.164,3.147; p =0.0008). Award recipients also received greater NIH funding ( p <0.0001) and were positively associated with Oncology/Skull Base, General, and Radiosurgery subspecialty training. Receiving a JST award may be correlated with a more productive research career and establishes benchmark metrics for JST award winning. To our knowledge, this is one of the first analyses on this type of award winning in neurosurgery using both the h -index and the more recently created RCR.
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AANS/CNS肿瘤联合分会(JST)获奖者文献计量学分析
AANS/CNS肿瘤联合分会(JST)奖是授予肿瘤研究和临床成就的奖项。在神经外科领域,学术奖励和学术生产力之间的关系尚未得到彻底的调查。我们探讨了JST奖项与学术生产力之间的关系,以评估学术产出、奖学金培训和获奖认可之间的关系。人口统计信息收集自包括115个研究生医学教育认可委员会认可机构在内的1671名学术神经外科医生的公开数据。h -index从Scopus中查询。平均相对引用比(RCR)和加权RCR从2002-2020年NIH iCite数据库中收集。JST的颁奖仪式由JST官方资源决定。采用多变量线性回归,比较获得JST奖励和未获得JST奖励的神经外科医生的RCR、h指数和NIH资助。分析显示,获奖者的w-RCR更高(β=15.02;95%置信区间:4.741,25.29;p <0.01),而m-RCR差异无统计学意义(β=-0.049, 95%CI 0.2214,0.1238;p = 0.5336)。H -指数在得奖者中较高(β=2.155;95% ci 1.164,3.147;p = 0.0008)。获奖者还获得了更多的NIH资助(p <0.0001),并且与肿瘤学/颅底、普通和放射外科亚专科培训呈正相关。获得JST奖项可能与更富有成效的研究生涯相关,并为JST获奖建立基准指标。据我们所知,这是首次使用h指数和最近创建的RCR对神经外科中这类获奖病例进行分析。
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