International and domestic co-publishing and their citation impact in different disciplines

  • Authors:
  • Hanna-Mari Puuska;Reetta Muhonen;Yrjö Leino

  • Affiliations:
  • University of Tampere, Tampere, Finland 33014 and CSC - IT Centre for Science, Espoo, Finland 02101;University of Tampere, Tampere, Finland 33014;CSC - IT Centre for Science, Espoo, Finland 02101

  • Venue:
  • Scientometrics
  • Year:
  • 2014

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Abstract

This paper studies disciplinary differences in citation impacts of different types of co-publishing. The citation impacts of international, domestic inter-organizational and domestic intra-organizational co-publications, and single-authored publications, are compared. In particular, we examine the extent to which the number of authors explains the potential differences in citation impacts when compared to the influence of different types of international and domestic collaborations. The analysis is based on Finland's publications in Thomson Reuters Web of Science database in 1990---2008. Finland is a small country, thus, it has fewer opportunities to find collaborators inside own country when compared to larger countries. Finland's science policy has underlined internationalization and research collaboration as key means to increase the quality and impact of Finnish research. This study indicates that both international and domestic co-publishing have steadily increased during the past two decades in all disciplinary groups. International co-publications gain on average more citations than domestic co-publications. In natural sciences and engineering, co-authorship explains only a small proportion of variability in publications' citation rates. When the effect of the number of authors is taken into account there are no big differences in citation impacts between international and domestic co-publications. However, international co-publications by ten authors or more gather significantly more citations than other publications. In humanities, the difference in citation impacts between co-authored publications in relation to single-authored publications is significant. However, international co-publications are not on average more highly cited in relation to domestic co-publications in humanities.