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Indian Journal of Dermatology, Venereology and Leprology
Medknow Publications on behalf of The Indian Association of Dermatologists, Venereologists and Leprologists (IADVL)
ISSN: 0378-6323 EISSN: 0973-3922
Vol. 72, Num. 4, 2006, pp. 322-325

Indian Journal of Dermatology, Venereology and Leprology, Vol. 72, No. 4, July-August, 2006, pp. 322-325

Focus

Journal impact factor

Department of Skin and Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Jagadguru Sri Shivarathreshwara Medical College Hospitals, Ramanuja Road, Mysore - 570004, Karnataka
Correspondence Address:"Sri Mallikarjuna Nilaya", Hig 33 Group 1 Phase 2, Hootagally KHB Extension, Mysore - 570018, Karnataka, kanthacad@yahoo.com

Code Number: dv06109

Introduction

Art and science of biomedical publication has rapidly changed with the advent of information technology. 'Journal impact factor'assesses the performance of a biomedical journal. This article reviews and analyzes this subject and suggests measures for improving them. Journal impact factor (JIF) is a journal quality assessment instrument monitored periodically by an organization called Thomson Scientific (formerly International Scientific Institute-ISI), Philadelphia, founded by Eugene Garfield.[1],[2]

The impact of an article on the reader can be understood using Miller's Pyramid[3],[4] to access the levels of awareness [Table - 1]. Only a few publications can reach to the level 4 or 5 where the published literature is utilized in practice. Impact is primarily a measure of scientific utility rather than scientific quality.[5] Originality and merit are the fundamental principles that determine the quality of an article. Journals offering priority to them are highly cited and ranked. The reliability of JIF as an indicator for journal quality is sometimes debated.[6] However, in the absence of a suitable alternative, JIF continues to be the indicator for a journal's performance.

JIF equation

In 1927 Gross and Gross introduced the concept of counting references to rank scientific journals.[7] In 1955 Eugene Garfield suggested citation counting could measure impact.[2] Garfield introduced the term Impact Factor in 1963.[8] Citation indicates an article has influenced scientific community as illustrated in [Table - 1]. Greater the frequency of an article being cited, higher will be its influence on the scientific community.[9] Citation is the total number of times an article is used as a reference and cited in the previous 2 years from the given year for which it is calculated.[1] If an article 'A' from IJDVL is cited 3 times in 2003 and 5 times in 2004, citation for article 'A' in 2005 is 8. Only research articles, original case reports, technical notes and reviews are citable items of a journal.[8],[9],[10] Commentaries, editorials, correspondence/letters to editors are 'non-citable.'

Calculation

According to ISI,[1] JIF is a quantitative measurement, a ratio, and not a number. The performance of an article is measured by citations; however, a journal is assessed by impact factor. It is the ratio of the total number of citations in the previous 2 years from the given year for which it is calculated to all the citable articles published in those 2 years.

Role of review and research articles

From the above equation, it is clear that reduction in the number of citable articles in denominator will increase JIF.[9],[10] Consequently, editorial board is compelled to look for priority among citable articles they receive. Lack of originality in citable articles may reduce the JIF. Consequently, the editorial board will prefer manuscripts with high priority that earns a good impact. JAMA's JIF was 4.8 in 1989 with 650 citable articles. In 2001 its JIF increased to 17.6 with 389 citable articles.[11] Increased publication volume in 1997 at the Lancet reduced JIF.[12] Reduction in publication volume increases JIF. Hence editors should restrict the number of review and original articles unless they are of exceptionally high standard.

Reviews score over research articles

Among citable articles, reviews are commonly cited than original research papers.[13] As reviews focus on various aspects and are an amalgamation of several original works of a topic in depth, they are usually cited.[14] Moreover, they form the core of a journal issue. Therefore, most reviews that are invited are authoritative or require prior editorial consent before submission.

Role of letters and editorials

Since letters and editorials are included in the numerator, they increase JIF. Citation to non-citable items increases the JIF. With a minimum space investment, they fetch a good JIF. Hence potential submissions as letters are usually accepted. Letters may be a) notes or b) comments and opinions. Submitted original articles with pilot studies, reports with less statistical data where further confirmation on large studies and brief reports are required are included in 'Notes' section. It is this category of letters that increases the citation density (average number of citations/article). The editors restrict comments and opinions except in special situation where the author has effectively illustrated with originality or it is authoritative and informative.

Type of research articles

Basic science subjects like biochemistry, cell biology and immunology have a very high JIF. A comparison of JIF among basic science, General medical and Dermatology journals are illustrated in [Table - 2]. When JIF are compared across various journals [Table - 2], basic science journal and specialty journal vary. JIF is not an indicator for any comparison between different specialties journals. Higher the degree of journal's specialization, lesser will be the JIF. JIF of general medical journals like New England Journal of Medicine, JAMA, LANCET and British Medical Journal should not be compared with specialty journals like Archives of Dermatology or British Journal of Surgery. Similarly a sub-specialty journal should not be compared with its parent specialty journal. Contact dermatitis or cutaneous surgery or pediatric dermatology journal cannot be compared with Archives of Dermatology or British Journal of Dermatology.

Journal of investigative dermatology publishes articles related to basic cutaneous research. Hence, it is highly ranked [Table - 2]. British Journal of Dermatology [Table - 2] has shown better performance in recent times by significantly incorporating basic science articles.

Online availability of full text articles

It increases circulation and readership of the journal. It has been demonstrated to increase the JIF.[15],[16] It can be FUTON (full text on the net), Abs (abstract only on net) or NAA (non-availability of abstracts). Free FUTON increases the JIF [Table - 3] and enables rapid dissemination. Hence upcoming journals encourage open access without any subscription fee, as the information is immediately accessed and cited by authors.

Length, conciseness and style of manuscripts

Concise manuscript is not shortened manuscript. It is an art and science where author puts across the data and effectively analyzes it with least possible words and delivers the message. Most of the journals have their own style. Citation density is usually directly proportional to the conciseness and length of the manuscript.[1],[8]

Self-citation

A significant correlation between self-citation rate and impact factors of orthopedic,[17] anesthesia[18] and European[19] journals has been illustrated. Although self-citation increases the JIF, editors can obtain declaration by authors and reviewers and verify its relevancy and appropriateness. This process increases transparency in publication.

Rapid review and early online publication

This process facilitates early attention of potential authors who can analyze and cite it.[15],[19] Selected articles can be placed for fast-track publication. Reduction in publication lag time increases JIF. Based on the above principle, JAAD has pre-blue section for high-impact articles.

Free ride hypothesis

Journals do not offer any free ride. It is an illusion to assume that publication in a high impact journal will enhance the impact of the article. Citation rate of an article increases the JIF, but not vice versa.[20] All the articles of a high quality journal will not have high citations. Skew distributions of citations were noticed in the Nature journal.[21]

Prevention of brain drain of quality articles

' Publish in India'campaign,[22] i.e., encouragement to publish in Indian journals, should be initiated. Periodic requests should be made to academic institutions to publish best of authors'works in Indian journals. Effective campaign can prevent brain drain of excellent articles.

Who is responsible for JIF?

Contributors should be aware of editorial board commitment to JIF and prepare the manuscript accordingly. Medline has listed 4,600 journals among 126,000 science journals published worldwide.[23] Indian journals with good JIF are Current Science of India, National Medical Journal of India, Indian Journal of Medical Research and recently included Indian Pediatrics[24] and Journal of Postgraduate Medicine. Recently our journal is indexed and has begun to make impact.

Authors, reviewers and editors all work to publish and update the existing level of knowledge in the literature in the interest of fellow physicians and patients. Authors should realize the importance of JIF. The editorial board should be more concerned and thus encourage authors to render their highest quality contributions and consequently increase the performance of the journal.

References

1.Garfield E. The history and meaning of the journal impact factors. JAMA 2006;295:90-3.  Back to cited text no. 1  [PUBMED]  [FULLTEXT]
2.Garfield E. Citation indexes for science a new dimension in documentation through association of ideas. Science 1955;122:108-10.  Back to cited text no. 2  [PUBMED]  
3.Miller GE The assessment of clinical skills competence performance. Acad med 1990:65:563-7.  Back to cited text no. 3    
4.Peile E. Knowing and knowing about. Br Med J 2006;332:645.  Back to cited text no. 4  [PUBMED]  [FULLTEXT]
5.Malaviya GN. Citation impact factor and Indian journal of surgery. Indian J Surg 2004;6;371-5.  Back to cited text no. 5    
6.Hoeffel C. Journal impact factors. Allergy 1998;53:1225.  Back to cited text no. 6  [PUBMED]  
7.Gross PL, Gross EM. College libraries and chemical education. Science 1927;66:385-9.  Back to cited text no. 7    
8.Garfield E. Journal impact factor: A brief review. CMAJ 1999;161:979-80.  Back to cited text no. 8  [PUBMED]  [FULLTEXT]
9.Dong P, loh M, Mondry A. The "Impact Factor" Revisited. Biomed Digit Lib 2005;2:7.  Back to cited text no. 9  [PUBMED]  [FULLTEXT]
10.Garfield E. How can impact factor be improved? Br Med J 1996;313:411-3.  Back to cited text no. 10  [PUBMED]  [FULLTEXT]
11.Joseph KS. Quality of impact factor of general medical journal. Br Med J 2003;326:283.  Back to cited text no. 11  [PUBMED]  [FULLTEXT]
12.Joseph KS, Hoey J. Cam's impact factor room for recalculation. CMAJ 1999;161:977-8.  Back to cited text no. 12    
13.Seglen PO. Why the impact factor of journal should not be used for evaluating research. Br Med J 1997;314:498-502.  Back to cited text no. 13    
14.Seglen PO. Evaluation of scientists by journal impact. In : representations of science and technology edited by: Weingart P, Sehringer R and Winterhager M. Leiden. DSWO press; 1992. p. 240-52.  Back to cited text no. 14    
15.Mueller PS, Murali NS, Chass, Evwin PJ, Ghosh AK. The effect of online status on the impact factors of generl internal medicine journals. Neth J Med 2006;64:39-44.  Back to cited text no. 15    
16.Murali NS, Murali HR, Anitha VP, Erwin PJ. Impact of FUTON and NAA bias on visibility of research. Mayo Clin Proc 2004;79:1001-6.  Back to cited text no. 16    
17.Hakkalamani S, Rawal A, Hennessy MS, Parkinson RW. The impact factor of seven orthopedic journals: Factors influencing it. J Bone Joint Surg Br 2006;88:159-62.  Back to cited text no. 17    
18.Fassoulaki A, Paraskeva A, Papilas K, Karabinis G. Self-citations in six anesthesia journals and their significance in determining the impact factor. Br J Anaesth 2000;84:266-9.   Back to cited text no. 18    
19.Narin F, Hamilton KS. Bibiliometric performance measures. Scientometrics 1996;36:293-310.  Back to cited text no. 19    
20.Seglen PO. Causal relationship between article citedness and journal impact. J Am Soc Inform Sci 1994;45:1-11.  Back to cited text no. 20    
21.Hansson S. Impact factor as a misleading tool in evaluation of medical journals. Lancet 1995;346:906.  Back to cited text no. 21    
22.Satyanarayana K. Time for "publish in India" movement. Indian J Med Res 2004;119:7-9.  Back to cited text no. 22    
23.Vanddermeer JW, Stalenhoef AF, Smit SP, Thien T. Abstract! Neth J Med 2002;60:418.  Back to cited text no. 23    
24.Gupta P, Choudhury P. Impact factor and Indian pediatrics. Indian Pediatr 2006;43:107-10.  Back to cited text no. 24    

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