2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.jceh.2015.04.003
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Online-to-print Lags and Baseline Number of Citations in 5 Science Citation Index Journals Related to Liver Diseases (2013–2014)

Abstract: Objectives: To analyze the length of online-to-print lags in 5 science citation index (SCI) journals related to liver diseases and their effect on the number of citations at the date of print publication. Designs: All original papers that were published between April 2013 and April 2014 in 5 SCI journals of liver diseases were systematically collected. The length of the online-to-print lag was defined as the difference between the date of print publication and the date of online publication. The number of cita… Show more

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“…Although research reported that online-to-print delays can artificially raise a journal’s impact factor, with AOP leading to earlier read and citations during the 2-year window for impact factor calculation based on print publication dates ( Tort, Targino & Amaral, 2012 ), the effect of online-to-print delays in impact factors among various journals remains unknown. A study on five journals related to liver diseases including 1,039 original articles found that the low-impact factor journals had significant longer online-to-print lags than the high-impact factor journals, contrary to the hypothesis of positive association between impact factors and the length of online-print delays ( Qi et al, 2015 ). In our study, no difference in impact factors was observed in ophthalmology journals that provided AOP with an online-to-print delay than journals without AOP.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…Although research reported that online-to-print delays can artificially raise a journal’s impact factor, with AOP leading to earlier read and citations during the 2-year window for impact factor calculation based on print publication dates ( Tort, Targino & Amaral, 2012 ), the effect of online-to-print delays in impact factors among various journals remains unknown. A study on five journals related to liver diseases including 1,039 original articles found that the low-impact factor journals had significant longer online-to-print lags than the high-impact factor journals, contrary to the hypothesis of positive association between impact factors and the length of online-print delays ( Qi et al, 2015 ). In our study, no difference in impact factors was observed in ophthalmology journals that provided AOP with an online-to-print delay than journals without AOP.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 86%