SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS FROM DEPARTMENTS OF CLINICAL PHYSIOLOGY AND NUCLEAR-MEDICINE IN DENMARK - A BIBLIOMETRIC ANALYSIS OF IMPACT IN THE YEARS 1989-1994
Hb. Hansen et al., SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS FROM DEPARTMENTS OF CLINICAL PHYSIOLOGY AND NUCLEAR-MEDICINE IN DENMARK - A BIBLIOMETRIC ANALYSIS OF IMPACT IN THE YEARS 1989-1994, Clinical physiology, 16(5), 1996, pp. 507-519
This study reports a bibliometric analysis of scientific publications
emanating from departments of clinical physiology and nuclear medicine
, Denmark, during the years 1989-1994. The total number of publication
s during this period was 860 (763 scientific journal papers, 71 book/b
ook chapters and 26 theses). Whereas the number of publications per ye
ar (188-113) decreased significantly with time (r = -0.94, P < 0.02),
the number of authors (mean 4.1) was almost constant over time. Univer
sity/university-related departments accounted for 96% of the papers. O
nly 8% of the papers resulted from a collaboration between two or more
departments of clinical physiology and nuclear medicine, but the coll
aboration with other medical specialities and institutions was much gr
eater (85%). The 763 papers were published in 239 different scientific
journals, 80% in journals with an official 'impact factor', a bibliom
etric measure of quality (the average number of times a paper is cited
in a journal in the publishing year and the subsequent year). Twenty
per cent (20%) and 8.4% were printed in journals with an impact factor
, respectively, of above 2.1 (the 500 journals most cited) and 3.7 (th
e 200 most cited), which is significantly above the national average (
16.6% and 6.0%, P < 0.001). The 'cumulated impact' (i.e. the impact of
all papers) showed a borderline significant decrease over time (r = -
0.77, P = 0.1), whereas the average impact per paper (1.53) remained a
lmost constant and was significantly above the national average (1.10,
P < 0.001). A close relationship was found between the number of pape
rs from a department and its cumulated impact (r = -0.97, P < 0.001).
It is concluded that the total number of scientific papers from Danish
departments of clinical physiology and nuclear medicine fell in the p
eriod, whereas the volume of quality, as assessed on the cumulated imp
act, only fell with borderline significance, and the impact per paper
was almost constant from 1989 to 1994, and was above the national aver
age.