Evaluation of the correlation between Altemetric attention score and citation number of top 50 articles in hip fractures: A cross-sectional study
Yousef Fallah, Mohammad Soleimani, Seyyed Hossein Shafiei, Mahin Ahmadi Pishkuhi- General Medicine
- Surgery
Background:
Publications quality evaluation gets more attention nowadays, because of its impact on researchers ranking and academic journals. beside traditional bibliometric tools, altemetric metrics have been introduced as tools to evaluate the dissemination of a study by the number of views, mentions, and posts on different websites and social medias.
Method:
In this study we evaluate the correlation between citation number as a traditional tool and Altemetric Attention Score as a new method . Scopus database was searched to find the 50 most cited manuscripts on “hip fractures” title from January 2015 to December 2020. After excluding irrelevant subjects, altimetric attention score (AAS) of included articles was collected from Altmetric.com website. At the last stage data were analysed using statistical tests.
Results:
According to statistical analysis, R2 was 0.121, and the
The differences observed between the two groups were significant only in “Readers on Mendeley” and “Dimensions”. Results shown that the impact factor of the journal and the AAS of articles had no significant relationship (R2 = 0.001,
Conclusion:
Findings showed that social media does not seem to be ineffective in disseminating published articles. It has also shown that Twitter can play a significant role in the propagation of articles on social networks. It is not unreasonable to say that the accessibility of a journal affects the dissemination of an article on social media. In the end, we found that the impact factor of the journal could not significantly affect the AAS.