Taken from The Proceedings of The ISPIM Americas Innovation Forum:
Montreal, Canada (2014)
ISBN 978-952-265-589-9. The full paper and/or presentation is available
to current members of ISPIM who must log in to the Members Section of
http://www.ispim.org to gain access.
Montreal, Canada (2014)
ISBN 978-952-265-589-9. The full paper and/or presentation is available
to current members of ISPIM who must log in to the Members Section of
http://www.ispim.org to gain access.
http://www.ispim.org/members/proceedings/Montreal14/commonfiles/files//613023210_Paper.pdf
Revisiting the determinants of citation counts in scientific publication
Abstract
Using a rich data set integrating information about researchers' fundingand publication in the province of Quebec, this paper intends to
identify the main determinants of their citation count. Using two-stage
least squares to control for endogeneity, the results confirm the
significant relationship between the number of articles and citation
counts. Our results also show that scientists with more articles in
higher impact factor journals generally receive more citations. In terms
of research team structure, the team size has a positive impact on the
number of citations. Hence the greater visibility provided by a more
prolific scientific production, better journals, and more co-authors,
all contribute to increasing the perceived impact of articles. The paper
also shows no gender bias which means that both male and female receive
the same number of citations. In most regressions for different fields
and disciplines, the amount of funding from different types does not
have a significant effect.