Content Factor: a measure of a journal's contribution to knowledge.

Impact Factor, the pre-eminent performance metric for medical journals, has been criticized for failing to capture the true impact of articles; for favoring methodology papers; for being unduly influenced by statistical outliers; and for examining a period of time too short to capture an article...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Joseph Bernstein, Chancellor F Gray
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3402382?pdf=render
_version_ 1818323021536952320
author Joseph Bernstein
Chancellor F Gray
author_facet Joseph Bernstein
Chancellor F Gray
author_sort Joseph Bernstein
collection DOAJ
description Impact Factor, the pre-eminent performance metric for medical journals, has been criticized for failing to capture the true impact of articles; for favoring methodology papers; for being unduly influenced by statistical outliers; and for examining a period of time too short to capture an article's long-term importance. Also, in the era of search engines, where readers need not skim through journals to find information, Impact Factor's emphasis on citation efficiency may be misplaced. A better metric would consider the total number of citations to all papers published by the journal (not just the recent ones), and would not be decremented by the total number of papers published. We propose a metric embodying these principles, "Content Factor", and examine its performance among leading medical and orthopaedic surgery journals. To remedy Impact Factor's emphasis on recent citations, Content Factor considers the total number of citations, regardless of the year in which the cited paper was published. To correct for Impact Factor's emphasis on efficiency, no denominator is employed. Content Factor is thus the total number of citations in a given year to all of the papers previously published in the journal. We found that Content Factor and Impact Factor are poorly correlated. We further surveyed 75 experienced orthopaedic authors and measured their perceptions of the "importance" of various orthopaedic surgery journals. The correlation between the importance score and the Impact Factor was only 0.08; the correlation between the importance score and Content Factor was 0.56. Accordingly, Content Factor better reflects a journal's "importance". In sum, while Content Factor cannot be defended as the lone metric of merit, to the extent that performance data informs journal evaluations, Content Factor--an easily obtained and intuitively appealing metric of the journal's knowledge contribution, not subject to gaming--can be a useful adjunct.
first_indexed 2024-12-13T11:06:04Z
format Article
id doaj.art-97a7c491f5a24dbca1406a37f64e6185
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-13T11:06:04Z
publishDate 2012-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-97a7c491f5a24dbca1406a37f64e61852022-12-21T23:49:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0177e4155410.1371/journal.pone.0041554Content Factor: a measure of a journal's contribution to knowledge.Joseph BernsteinChancellor F GrayImpact Factor, the pre-eminent performance metric for medical journals, has been criticized for failing to capture the true impact of articles; for favoring methodology papers; for being unduly influenced by statistical outliers; and for examining a period of time too short to capture an article's long-term importance. Also, in the era of search engines, where readers need not skim through journals to find information, Impact Factor's emphasis on citation efficiency may be misplaced. A better metric would consider the total number of citations to all papers published by the journal (not just the recent ones), and would not be decremented by the total number of papers published. We propose a metric embodying these principles, "Content Factor", and examine its performance among leading medical and orthopaedic surgery journals. To remedy Impact Factor's emphasis on recent citations, Content Factor considers the total number of citations, regardless of the year in which the cited paper was published. To correct for Impact Factor's emphasis on efficiency, no denominator is employed. Content Factor is thus the total number of citations in a given year to all of the papers previously published in the journal. We found that Content Factor and Impact Factor are poorly correlated. We further surveyed 75 experienced orthopaedic authors and measured their perceptions of the "importance" of various orthopaedic surgery journals. The correlation between the importance score and the Impact Factor was only 0.08; the correlation between the importance score and Content Factor was 0.56. Accordingly, Content Factor better reflects a journal's "importance". In sum, while Content Factor cannot be defended as the lone metric of merit, to the extent that performance data informs journal evaluations, Content Factor--an easily obtained and intuitively appealing metric of the journal's knowledge contribution, not subject to gaming--can be a useful adjunct.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3402382?pdf=render
spellingShingle Joseph Bernstein
Chancellor F Gray
Content Factor: a measure of a journal's contribution to knowledge.
PLoS ONE
title Content Factor: a measure of a journal's contribution to knowledge.
title_full Content Factor: a measure of a journal's contribution to knowledge.
title_fullStr Content Factor: a measure of a journal's contribution to knowledge.
title_full_unstemmed Content Factor: a measure of a journal's contribution to knowledge.
title_short Content Factor: a measure of a journal's contribution to knowledge.
title_sort content factor a measure of a journal s contribution to knowledge
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3402382?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT josephbernstein contentfactorameasureofajournalscontributiontoknowledge
AT chancellorfgray contentfactorameasureofajournalscontributiontoknowledge