
Taxonomic papers as published products of the biodiversity inventory: if not the Impact Factor (IF) or Quartiles (Q), then what determines their importance estimated on the basis of the Research Interest Score?
Author(s) -
Viktorija Dobrynina,
S. V. Baryshnikova,
Eduardas Budrys,
Jolanta Rimšaitė,
Oleksiy Bidzilya
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
biologija
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2029-0578
pISSN - 1392-0146
DOI - 10.6001/biologija.v67i2.4454
Subject(s) - quartile , popularity , impact factor , computer science , actuarial science , library science , statistics , economics , mathematics , political science , law , confidence interval
This study is uniquely based on the Research Interest Score (RGRI) and not on other existing bibliometric criteria for evaluation of published biological inventory products (articles and monographs). RGRI is a ResearchGate.net score that measures scientists’ interest in the publication and is based on its citations, recommendations, and reads. Our data revealed that high RGRI scores of publications were generally not determined by the journal’s Impact Factor (IF) or high quartiles (Q). However, open access to publications undoubtedly creates the strongest preconditions for the rise of RGRI. The importance and popularity of a publications can also be affected by its various other characteristics, for example, international collaboration of authors, ecological issues such as plant-insect interactions, and even the wording of the publication title.