Did I report yesterday on the first preprint article that compared Impact factors calculated with JCR and Scopus, later that day a second journal was published on e-lis covering the same subject. Gorraiz and Schoegl (2007) took the analysis really a step further than Pislyakov (2007). Not only did they include a larger set of journals in their sample 100 compared to 20, they also looked at the other bibliometric indicator the immediacy index.
Interesting is the determination of the authors to look for journals in the chosen subject area, pharmacology, that were not included in the JCR but should have been there on the basis of their citations. In the journal selection process of Thomson some other factors are taken into account, but in practice we expect all top journals in a certain category to be included in the JCR/WoS database. So it is interesting to learn that there are a number of journals that should have been included on the basis of citation data in the databases of Thomson.
At the beginning of the article the authors state:
Since there are more journals included in Scopus than in WoS, a journal in Scopus has a higher cace to get cited in general. Therefore the the values for the impact factor and the immediacy index should also be higher in Scopus
This might sound plausible, but in actual fact the effect of a larger journal base is much smaller. Because Web of Science already covers virtually all top journals in the subject category they also cover the journals where most citations take place. Outside the top journals relatively little citation traffic takes place. This has been demonstrated by Ioannidis (2006) and is also indicated in journal selection policy of Thomson where they refer to some of their own research:
More recently, an analysis of 7,528 journals covered in the 2005 JCR® revealed that as few as 300 journals account for more than 50% of what is cited and more than 25% of what is published in them. A core of 3,000 of these journals accounts for about 75% of published articles and over 90% of cited articles.
What really is disturbing from both the articles of Gorraiz and Schoegl (2007) and Pislyakov (2007) is that both databases are not one hundred percent reliable when it comes to number of article published in a given year. For Scopus there we can expect some minor discrepancies since we are dealing with a young database that shows still some fluctuations in content. Elsevier still has some work to do. For WoS it is sometimes just sloppiness in indexing and that is unforgivable.
References:
Gorraiz, J. & C. Schloegl (2007). A bibliometric analysis of pharmacology and pharmacy journals: Scopus versus Web of Science. Journal of Information Science 00(00): 00-00. http://eprints.rclis.org/archive/00011966/
Ioannidis, J. P. A. (2006). Concentration of the Most-Cited Papers in the Scientific Literature: Analysis of Journal Ecosystems. PLoS ONE 1(1): e5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000005
Pislyakov, V. (2007). Comparing two “thermometers”: Impact factors of 20 leading economic journals according to Journal Citation Reports and Scopus. E-Lis. http://eprints.rclis.org/archive/00011865/

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