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Toward more meaningful evaluation of contributions and journals across different specialties: Introducing specialty impact factor
Correspondence Address:
Sanjay Singh
C-23, Swastik Towers, Lanka, Varanasi - 221 005, Uttar Pradesh
India
How to cite this article: Singh S. Toward more meaningful evaluation of contributions and journals across different specialties: Introducing specialty impact factor. Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol 2013;79:737-738 |
Given the fact that there are a large number of journals published in all major fields of science, it is considered important to have some system to assess their quality. Impact factor, created by Eugene Garfield and Irving H. Sher in early 1960s, has become a popular indicator of the quality of a journal. [1] Impact factors of the journals for the preceding year are released by Thomson Reuters annually in June in Journal Citation Reports. Impact factor of a journal for the year 2012 is calculated as follows: [2]
- A = Number of times the citable items published in a particular journal in the years 2010 and 2011 were cited by articles in indexed journals in 2012.
- B = Total number of citable items published in that journal in the years 2010 and 2011.
- 2012 impact factor of the journal = A/B.
Use of Impact Factor to Compare Contributions and Journals in Different Specialties
Despite some of its limitations [1] and development of some other indices, impact factor is probably the most frequently used index to assess the quality of a journal. As a consequence, if an author publishes an article in a journal, which has a high impact factor, the contribution is viewed more favorably. Articles published in high impact factor journals generally receive more positive attention or more points when someone seeks an academic benefit.
The concept of devising scoring system for evaluating publications of the individuals makes assessment of their contributions more objective and is certainly a well-intentioned and praise-worthy major step. The system is excellent when a particular specialty is considered because all individuals will be from the same field. However, there arises a peculiar situation when the same criteria are applied for individuals working in different specialties. To explain this, let us imagine a hypothetical specialty in which the highest impact factor journal has an impact factor of 50; and another hypothetical specialty in which the journal with the highest impact factor has an impact factor of only five. This can happen because the number of persons doing research in a particular field may considerably vary compared with those working in another field. With more persons publishing in a specialty, the chances of citations of an article in that field are more and thus the impact factors of the journals of that specialty will be higher. This puts persons working in "smaller" specialties (i.e., where comparatively fewer researchers are working and consequently the journals get lower impact factors) at disadvantage. An individual working in such a field will get lower scores, not because the person′s work is lacking in quality, but because there are less number of individuals working in that particular specialty to cite the work. Said another way, the contributions of a person working in a "smaller" (as explained above) specialty will have to be more to get the same scores compared with another in a field with higher impact factor journals. One solution to this problem may be is to have different scoring criteria for different specialties, a solution that appears to be very complicated and thus probably impractical.
Another strange situation arises from the fact that human minds learn to make comparative and evaluative relations from an early age as recent research shows. [3] As this relational responding is arbitrarily applicable, [3] we may sometimes make comparisons when doing so and this may not be correct or beneficial. The impact factor should be used to compare different journals within a certain field. [2] However, sometimes one may be inclined to compare impact factors of different specialties and conclude that one journal of a particular field, which has a higher impact factor, is superior to a different specialty′s journal with a lower impact factor.
Toward More Meaningful Comparisons: Specialty Impact Factor (S-Impact Factor)
For the particular purpose of comparing contributions and journals across different specialties and thus resolving the aforementioned situations, impact factor may be modified by devising the concept of S-impact factor. S-impact factor is to be calculated as follows:
- A = Impact factor of a journal
- B = Highest impact factor in the same specialty
- S-impact factor = A/B.
General medical journals, like the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), which usually have a higher impact factor compared with specialty journals, also rarely publish specialty articles. This is a tricky situation for S-impact factor to handle. However, this is a rare event; out of the 14,610 articles published in NEJM in the past 10 years (source: PubMed), only 470 (i.e., 0.03%) belonged to dermatology. [4] To address this rare event, S-impact factor of the journal in which the article has been published may be considered.
[Table - 1] shows 2012 impact factors [5] and S-impact factors of top 10 dermatology journals and the Indian Journal of Dermatology, Venereology and Leprology.
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