Science Policy: Bibliometrics and impact
Nature has published (17 October 2013) a special on Impact - methodologies, use and misuse, and implications.
Nature has published (17 October 2013) a special on Impact - methodologies, use and misuse, and implications.
The San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA) was developed at the American Society for Cell Biology meeting in late 2012. It argues for the elimination of journal impact factors in assessing scientists in funding, appointment and promotion decisions. In addition to the many US signatories, HEFCE and Wellcome have signed. The themes of the recommendations are summarised as..../
Bruce Alberts, in a Science editorial, discusses the negative impact of metrics on innovation and risk taking in new areas of science: new areas of science are relatively sparsely populated with fewer papers consequently fewer citiations. He says "the leaders of the scientific enterprise must accept full responsibility for thoughtfully analyzing the scientific contributions of other researchers. To do so in a meaningful way requires the actual reading of a small selected set of each researcher's publications, a task that must not be passed by default to journal editors".
PNAS cautions on in the unintended effect of impact factors and what happens when indicators replace judgement: an indicator developed for librarians that has had huge and unintended influence on the intellectual economy of science. Marder, E, Kettenmann, H & Grillner S (2010) Impacting our young PNAS 107 (50) 21233; doi:10.1073/pnas.1016516107