International collaboration leading to high citations: global impact or home country effect?
Scientific research has become more collaborative, which brings a number of advantages including higher citation rates. This study examines the factors contributing to higher citations by distinguishing between the quality of work and the home country effect. Using international co-authorship as a k...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1807202024-10-22T01:42:13Z International collaboration leading to high citations: global impact or home country effect? Wang, Jue Frietsch, Rainer Neuhäusler, Peter Hooi, Rosalie School of Social Sciences Social Sciences International collaboration Publications Scientific research has become more collaborative, which brings a number of advantages including higher citation rates. This study examines the factors contributing to higher citations by distinguishing between the quality of work and the home country effect. Using international co-authorship as a key variable, we analyze citation patterns across a diverse range of fields over a 10-year period, and differentiate between citations accrued in the authors’ countries and citations received in other countries. The results demonstrate the presence of both global impact and a home country effect. Specifically, publications with international co-authorship receive significantly more citations from abroad, which strongly implies that international collaboration fosters high quality research and positively impacts citation rates, especially when considering the relatively smaller foreign community size once the authors’ home countries are excluded. On the other hand, it is also observed that domestic citations from authors’ countries increase faster than foreign citations and the effect is more pronounced over a longer period of time, which suggests that home country effect plays an important role in accumulating citations through the increased visibility in the domestic research community. The study confirms the pivotal role of international collaboration in research impact and highlights the significance of network building. The analyses have been conducted during a research visit at the Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation Research and in exchanges afterwards. The Fraunhofer ISI data access is supported via the German Competence Network for Bibliometrics funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Grant: 16WIK2101A). 2024-10-22T01:42:13Z 2024-10-22T01:42:13Z 2024 Journal Article Wang, J., Frietsch, R., Neuhäusler, P. & Hooi, R. (2024). International collaboration leading to high citations: global impact or home country effect?. Journal of Informetrics, 18(4), 101565-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.joi.2024.101565 1751-1577 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/180720 10.1016/j.joi.2024.101565 2-s2.0-85199480081 4 18 101565 en Journal of Informetrics © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies. |
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Social Sciences International collaboration Publications Wang, Jue Frietsch, Rainer Neuhäusler, Peter Hooi, Rosalie International collaboration leading to high citations: global impact or home country effect? |
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Scientific research has become more collaborative, which brings a number of advantages including higher citation rates. This study examines the factors contributing to higher citations by distinguishing between the quality of work and the home country effect. Using international co-authorship as a key variable, we analyze citation patterns across a diverse range of fields over a 10-year period, and differentiate between citations accrued in the authors’ countries and citations received in other countries. The results demonstrate the presence of both global impact and a home country effect. Specifically, publications with international co-authorship receive significantly more citations from abroad, which strongly implies that international collaboration fosters high quality research and positively impacts citation rates, especially when considering the relatively smaller foreign community size once the authors’ home countries are excluded. On the other hand, it is also observed that domestic citations from authors’ countries increase faster than foreign citations and the effect is more pronounced over a longer period of time, which suggests that home country effect plays an important role in accumulating citations through the increased visibility in the domestic research community. The study confirms the pivotal role of international collaboration in research impact and highlights the significance of network building. |
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School of Social Sciences |
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School of Social Sciences Wang, Jue Frietsch, Rainer Neuhäusler, Peter Hooi, Rosalie |
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Article |
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Wang, Jue Frietsch, Rainer Neuhäusler, Peter Hooi, Rosalie |
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Wang, Jue |
title |
International collaboration leading to high citations: global impact or home country effect? |
title_short |
International collaboration leading to high citations: global impact or home country effect? |
title_full |
International collaboration leading to high citations: global impact or home country effect? |
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International collaboration leading to high citations: global impact or home country effect? |
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International collaboration leading to high citations: global impact or home country effect? |
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international collaboration leading to high citations: global impact or home country effect? |
publishDate |
2024 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/180720 |
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