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Hello fellow journalologists,
This week the Nature Index published its latest set of metrics, which cover 145 of the most influential journals, as selected by a board of independent academics. I was never responsible for Nature Index during my time working on the Nature journals; I’ve always had concerns about its methodology, which I’ve outlined in this newsletter. Nevertheless, the Index provides an interesting snapshot of where some of the best research originates from. Users should be aware of its limitations, however, especially with regards to the highly skewed data set.
Nature Index (Chris Woolston)
JB: The increase in the quality and quantity of research from China is well documented. These new data provide additional evidence to show how important it is for publishers to attract the best research coming out of China. The list of the 145 journals that are included in the Nature Index can be found here. You can explore the metric tables here.
The Nature Index needs to be interpreted cautiously. It’s important to remember that the 145 journals publish different numbers of papers each year and that their contribution to the Index is proportional to their size. I tidied up the article numbers listed on the Nature Index website and created a Google Sheet with the journals sorted by article output.
10% of the articles included in the 145 journals were published in just one journal, Nature Communications, which contributed 7,341 articles to the Index. By contrast, Arthritis & Rheumatology, the smallest journal, contributed just 14 articles to the Index.
Indeed, the top 10 journals, ranked by article output, published 40% of the articles used to calculate the Index; the top 15 journals published over half of the papers. Many of these journals cover the fields of chemistry, materials science and physics; the Nature Index is heavily skewed towards research areas where China is especially strong.
Every publisher needs to have a strategy to attract the best research that originates from China. Clarke & Esposito recently published a report, in collaboration with Nicko Goncharoff, that provides insight into the China market. You can read the Q&A with Nicko here. I’ve read many reports on China’s publishing market over the years and this is by far and away the best I’ve seen. (N.B. I have a clear conflict of interest here since I have a C&E affiliation)
Nature Index (Bianca Nogrady)
JB: This ‘news’ is unsurprising given the size and influence of the US clinical academic societies. The list of the 64 journals that are included can be found here, together with a description of the journal-selection process. It’s worth noting that the 9,200 health-science articles form just 13% of the total corpus of 72,800 articles that form the Nature Index (see Google Sheet).
There are some notable omissions. Nature Medicine is not included, for example, even though it’s now a member of ICMJE and is publishing much more clinical research than it did historically (see issue 20 of this newsletter). The Journal of Physiology is on the list, which is bizarre since it publishes very little clinical research. The Lancet Infectious Diseases is not included (a glaring error), but some of the other Lancet specialty journals are.
I’ve never been a fan of the methodology that the Nature Index uses to select journals ━ the inclusion criteria are opaque and the selection process is arbitrary.
PeerJ Blog
EDP Sciences (Anne Ruimy, Agnès Henri, and Amandine Véber)
Frontiers blog
The Official PLOS Blog (Alison Mudditt)
The Scholarly Kitchen (Bruce Rosenblum)
BMJ (Khaoula Ben Messaoud et al)
JB: Editors should read this paper, which analysed more than 100 000 submitted research manuscripts and 250 000 responses to peer review invitations from 21 biomedical journals (all part of the BMJ Publishing Group). The first author wrote an accompanying opinion article, which summarises the key findings.
arXiv (Shahan Ali Memon, Kinga Makovi, and Bedoor AlShebli)
This article from the Harvard Business Review resonated with me (or at least the former me that worked for a large corporation).
The authors go on to say:
Every senior leader should read Cal Newport’s book Deep Work, which had a huge influence on me. Indeed, I would go so far as to say that it was a significant contributor to me deciding to hand in my notice and to start to write this newsletter. Doing deep work makes me happy. Answering emails (unless they're from happy newsletter subscribers) does not.
Until next week...
James
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