Monday 25 September 2017

Increase your visibility



 Source: http://whyopenresearch.org/visibility



Increase
your
visibility

Be
open
and
get
more
citations,
page
views,
downloads,
and

media
attention
for
your
research.







It’s important, especially for early-career researchers, to build a
name for themselves. For that, your work has to be seen, read, and
cited. Sharing your work can make that happen.






Be open → Get more citations!




Numerous studies have shown that publishing openly – whether in an OA
journal, or self-archiving in an open repository – confers a citation
advantage.






Article sharing




Manuscripts posted in open repositories prior to formal publication
are called preprints. Preprints start gathering citations earlier and
maintain a citation advantage over articles published only in
traditional journals for months or years to come.





Source: Anne Gentil-Beccot, Salvatore Mele, and Travis
Brooks.
2009. arXiv:0906.5418v2.




Source: Anne Gentil-Beccot, Salvatore Mele, and Travis
Brooks. 2009. arXiv:0906.5418v2.


And it's not just one
study. The Open Access Citation
Advantage Service
, maintained by SPARC Europe, keeps an up-to-date
list of relevant citation studies and summaries of their results. To
date, the majority of studies find a significant citation advantage of
publishing openly.





Source: Data
from The Open Access
Citation Advantage Service
, SPARC Europe. Accessed October,
2015. Figure produced by E.C. McKiernan (CC BY).






The open access citation advantage holds for diverse fields, with
maximum percent increases in citations from 36-600%!





Source: Data
from Alma Swan,
2010
. Figure produced by E.C. McKiernan (CC BY).





Data sharing




Studies that share their data openly tend to get more citations than
studies that do not make their data available.





Source: Heather A. Piwowar, Roger S. Day, and Douglas
B. Fridsma. 2007. PLOS
ONE, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0000308. Figure
licensed CC BY.




Source: Heather A. Piwowar​ and Todd
J. Vision. 2013. PeerJ, doi:10.7717/peerj.175. Figure
licensed CC BY.






Code sharing




Sharing code can also lead to more citations, as shown in this
2012 study by
Patrick Vandewalle
(free version
here
[pdf]).







Be open → get more readers




Open access articles get more tweeters and Mendeley readers than paywalled
articles published in the same journal.






Source: Euan Adie.
2014. figshare, doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.1213690
(CC BY).


Open access articles receive more page views than non-OA articles.






Source: Xianwen Wang, Chen Liu, Wenli Mao, and Zhichao
Fang. 2015. arXiv:1503.05702.









So...get sharing and get seen!








Increase your visibility

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