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Overview:
Many studies show that open access (OA) articles—articles from scholarly journals made freely available to readers without requiring subscription fees—are downloaded, and presumably read, more often than closed access/subscription-only articles. Assertions that OA articles are also cited more often generate more controversy. Confounding factors (authors may self-select only the best articles to make OA; absence of an appropriate control group of non-OA articles with which to compare citation figures; conflation of pre-publication vs. published/publisher versions of articles, etc.) make demonstrating a real citation difference difficult. This study addresses those factors and shows that an open access citation advantage as high as 19% exists, even when articles are embargoed during some or all of their prime citation years. Not surprisingly, better (defined as above median) articles gain more when made OA.
Subject:
Health, Medicine and Nursing
Level:
Graduate / Professional
Material Type:
Reading
Author:
Provider:
PLOS ONE
Date Added:
08/07/2020
License:
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Language:
English
Media Format:
Text/HTML

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