TY - GEN
T1 - Does monetary support increase citation impact of scholarly papers?
AU - Tonta, Yasar
AU - Akbulut, Müge
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 17th International Conference on Scientometrics and Informetrics, ISSI 2019 - Proceedings. All rights reserved.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - One of the main indicators of scientific development of a given country is the number of papers published in high impact scholarly journals. Many countries introduced performance-based research funding systems (PRFSs) to create a more competitive environment where prolific researchers get rewarded with subsidies to increase both the quantity and quality of papers. Yet, subsidies do not always function as a leverage to improve the citation impact of scholarly papers. This paper investigates the effect of the publication support system of Turkey (TR) on the citation impact of papers authored by Turkish researchers. Based on a stratified probabilistic sample of 4,521 TR-addressed papers, it compares the number of citations to determine if supported papers were cited more often than those of not supported ones, and if they were published injournals with relatively higher citation impact in terms ofjournal impact factors, article influence scores and quartiles. Both supported and not supported papers received comparable number of citations per paper, and were published in journals with similar citation impact values. Findings suggest that subsidies do not seem to be an effective incentive to improve the quality of scholarly papers. Such support programs should therefore be reconsidered.
AB - One of the main indicators of scientific development of a given country is the number of papers published in high impact scholarly journals. Many countries introduced performance-based research funding systems (PRFSs) to create a more competitive environment where prolific researchers get rewarded with subsidies to increase both the quantity and quality of papers. Yet, subsidies do not always function as a leverage to improve the citation impact of scholarly papers. This paper investigates the effect of the publication support system of Turkey (TR) on the citation impact of papers authored by Turkish researchers. Based on a stratified probabilistic sample of 4,521 TR-addressed papers, it compares the number of citations to determine if supported papers were cited more often than those of not supported ones, and if they were published injournals with relatively higher citation impact in terms ofjournal impact factors, article influence scores and quartiles. Both supported and not supported papers received comparable number of citations per paper, and were published in journals with similar citation impact values. Findings suggest that subsidies do not seem to be an effective incentive to improve the quality of scholarly papers. Such support programs should therefore be reconsidered.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85073874304
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85073874304
T3 - 17th International Conference on Scientometrics and Informetrics, ISSI 2019 - Proceedings
SP - 1952
EP - 1963
BT - 17th International Conference on Scientometrics and Informetrics, ISSI 2019 - Proceedings
A2 - Catalano, Giuseppe
A2 - Daraio, Cinzia
A2 - Gregori, Martina
A2 - Moed, Henk F.
A2 - Ruocco, Giancarlo
PB - International Society for Scientometrics and Informetrics
T2 - 17th International Conference on Scientometrics and Informetrics, ISSI 2019
Y2 - 2 September 2019 through 5 September 2019
ER -