articleCollege & Research LibrariesSep 1, 2004DIAMOND OA

Do Open-Access Articles Have a Greater Research Impact?

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · North Carolina State University

Indexed incrossrefdoaj

Abstract

Although many authors believe that their work has a greater research impact if it is freely available, studies to demonstrate that impact are few. This study looks at articles in four disciplines at varying stages of adoption of open access—philosophy, political science, electrical and electronic engineering and mathematics—to see whether they have a greater impact as measured by citations in the ISI Web of Science database when their authors make them freely available on the Internet. The finding is that, across all four disciplines, freely available articles do have a greater research impact. Shedding light on this category of open access reveals that scholars in diverse disciplines are adopting open-access…

Citation impact

685
total citations
FWCI
44.34
Percentile
100%
References
25
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • The Internet
  • Computer science
  • World Wide Web
  • Work (physics)
  • Open science
  • Data science
  • Engineering
  • Mathematics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Quality Education
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