Profit (p)-Index: The Degree to Which Authors Profit from Co-Authors

被引:39
作者
Aziz, Nasir Ahmad [1 ]
Rozing, Maarten Pieter [2 ]
机构
[1] Leiden Univ Med Ctr, Dept Neurol, Leiden, Netherlands
[2] GGZinGeest Geestgronden, Inst Mental Hlth Care, Amstelveen, Netherlands
来源
PLOS ONE | 2013年 / 8卷 / 04期
关键词
H-INDEX; SCIENTIFIC-RESEARCH; PUBLICATION; CREDIT;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0059814
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Current metrics for estimating a scientist's academic performance treat the author's publications as if these were solely attributable to the author. However, this approach ignores the substantive contributions of co-authors, leading to misjudgments about the individual's own scientific merits and consequently to misallocation of funding resources and academic positions. This problem is becoming the more urgent in the biomedical field where the number of collaborations is growing rapidly, making it increasingly harder to support the best scientists. Therefore, here we introduce a simple harmonic weighing algorithm for correcting citations and citation-based metrics such as the h-index for co-authorships. This weighing algorithm can account for both the nvumber of co-authors and the sequence of authors on a paper. We then derive a measure called the 'profit (p)-index', which estimates the contribution of co-authors to the work of a given author. By using samples of researchers from a renowned Dutch University hospital, Spinoza Prize laureates (the most prestigious Dutch science award), and Nobel Prize laureates in Physiology or Medicine, we show that the contribution of co-authors to the work of a particular author is generally substantial (i.e., about 80%) and that researchers' relative rankings change materially when adjusted for the contributions of co-authors. Interestingly, although the top University hospital researchers had the highest h-indices, this appeared to be due to their significantly higher p-indices. Importantly, the ranking completely reversed when using the profit adjusted h-indices, with the Nobel laureates having the highest, the Spinoza Prize laureates having an intermediate, and the top University hospital researchers having the lowest profit adjusted h-indices, respectively, suggesting that exceptional researchers are characterized by a relatively high degree of scientific independency/ originality. The concepts and methods introduced here may thus provide a more fair impression of a scientist's autonomous academic performance.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 19 条
[1]   Weighted indices for evaluating the quality of research with multiple authorship [J].
Abbas, Ash Mohammad .
SCIENTOMETRICS, 2011, 88 (01) :107-131
[2]   Do metrics matter? [J].
Abbott, Alison ;
Cyranoski, David ;
Jones, Nicola ;
Maher, Brendan ;
Schiermeier, Quirin ;
Van Noorden, Richard .
NATURE, 2010, 465 (7300) :860-862
[3]   Predicting scientific success [J].
Acuna, Daniel E. ;
Allesina, Stefano ;
Kording, Konrad P. .
NATURE, 2012, 489 (7415) :201-202
[4]   The meaning of author order in medical research [J].
Baerlocher, Mark Otto ;
Newton, Marshall ;
Gautam, Tina ;
Tomlinson, George ;
Detsky, Allan S. .
JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE MEDICINE, 2007, 55 (04) :174-180
[5]   Is it possible to compare researchers with different scientific interests? [J].
Batista, Pablo D. ;
Campiteli, Monica G. ;
Kinouchi, Osame ;
Martinez, Alexandre S. .
SCIENTOMETRICS, 2006, 68 (01) :179-189
[6]   Are there better indices for evaluation purposes than the h index?: a comparison of nine different variants of the h index using data from biomedicine [J].
Bornmann, Lutz ;
Mutz, Ruediger ;
Daniel, Hans-Dieter .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR INFORMATION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2008, 59 (05) :830-837
[7]   A bibliometric index based on the collaboration distance between cited and citing authors [J].
Bras-Amoros, Maria ;
Domingo-Ferrer, Josep ;
Torra, Vicenc .
JOURNAL OF INFORMETRICS, 2011, 5 (02) :248-264
[8]   Theory and practise of the g-index [J].
Egghe, Leo .
SCIENTOMETRICS, 2006, 69 (01) :131-152
[9]   The demise of the lone author [J].
Greene, Mott .
NATURE, 2007, 450 (7173) :1165-1165
[10]   Harmonic publication and citation counting: sharing authorship credit equitably - not equally, geometrically or arithmetically [J].
Hagen, Nils T. .
SCIENTOMETRICS, 2010, 84 (03) :785-793