在摘要中使用宣传语言的科学出版物会得到更多的引用和公众的关注。

Olga Stavrova, Bennett Kleinberg, Anthony M Evans, Milena Ivanović
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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究人员经常在科学出版物中使用宣传语言(“炒作”)来吸引人们对他们的发现的关注。在这里,我们研究了宣传语言是否确实与更高的学术影响和公众关注有关。对发表在三个主要跨学科网点(PNAS: 84,603;科学:25142;Nature: 26,870)表明,推广语言预示着更多的引用和更多的全文论文浏览量,更多的论文被在线媒体提及和更高的Altmetric分数。此外,对第一作者和最后作者性别的进一步分析(第一女性作者n = 15,368,第一男性作者n = 32,873,最后女性作者n = 10,218,最后男性作者n = 46,606)表明,尽管女性经常被建议更多地进行自我推销,但遵循这一建议与影响指标上的性别差距并不显着相关。如果有什么区别的话,那就是宣传语言预示着更大的性别差距,男性(相对于女性)获得更多的引用、论文浏览量和媒体提及量。我们的研究结果强调了传播策略在学术影响和公众关注方面的作用,以及学术界的性别多样性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Scientific publications that use promotional language in the abstract receive more citations and public attention.

Scientific publications that use promotional language in the abstract receive more citations and public attention.

Scientific publications that use promotional language in the abstract receive more citations and public attention.

Scientific publications that use promotional language in the abstract receive more citations and public attention.

Scientific publications that use promotional language in the abstract receive more citations and public attention.

Scientific publications that use promotional language in the abstract receive more citations and public attention.

Scientific publications that use promotional language in the abstract receive more citations and public attention.

Researchers often use promotional language ("hyping") in scientific publications to draw attention to their findings. Here we examined whether promotional language is indeed associated with higher academic impact and public attention. A content analysis of over 130,000 abstracts published in three major interdisciplinary outlets (PNAS: 84,603; Science: 25,142; Nature: 26,870) between 1991 and 2023 showed that promotional language predicted more citations and more full-length paper views, more paper mentions in online media and higher Altmetric scores. Further, additional analyses by first and last author gender (first female author n = 15,368, first male author n = 32,873, last female author n = 10,218, last male author n = 46,606) showed that despite women being often advised to engage in more self-promotion, following this advice was not significantly associated with a smaller gender gap in impact indicators. If anything, promotional language predicted a larger gender gap with men (vs. women) receiving even more citations, paper views and mentions in the media. Our findings highlight the role of communication strategies in academic impact and public attention, as well as gender diversity in academia.

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