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      Factors associated with the Journal Impact Factor (JIF) for Urology and Nephrology Journals

      International braz j urol
      Sociedade Brasileira de Geologia
      Journal Impact Factor, Urology, Nephrology, Periodicals as Topic

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          Abstract

          Purpose: The Journal Impact Factor (JIF) is an index used to compare a journal's quality among academic journals and it is commonly used as a proxy for journal quality. We sought to examine the JIF in order to elucidate the main predictors of the index while generating awareness among scientific community regarding need to modify the index calculation in the attempt to turn it more accurate. Materials and Methods: Under the Urology and Nephrology category in the Journal Citations Report Website, the top 17 Journals by JIF in 2011 were chosen for the study. All manuscripts’ abstracts published from 2009-2010 were reviewed; each article was categorized based on its research design (Retrospective, Review, etc). T and correlation tests were performed for categorical and continuous variables respectively. The JIF was the dependent variable. All variables were then included in a multivariate model. Results: 23,012 articles from seventeen journals were evaluated with a median of 1,048 (range=78-6,342) articles per journal. Journals with a society affiliation were associated with a higher JIF (p=0.05). Self-citations (rho=0.57, p=0.02), citations for citable articles (rho=0.73, p=0.001), citations to non-citable articles (rho=0.65, p=0.0046), and retrospective studies (rho=-0.51, p=0.03) showed a strong correlation. Slight modifications to include the non-citable articles in the denominator yield drastic changes in the JIF and the ranking of the journals. Conclusion: The JIF appears to be closely associated with the number of citable articles published. A change in the formula for calculating JIF to include all types of published articles in the denominator would result in a more accurate representation.

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          Most cited references27

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          The history and meaning of the journal impact factor.

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            Journal impact factor: a brief review.

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              How can impact factors be improved?

              Impact factors are widely used to rank and evaluate journals. They are also often used inappropriately as surrogates in evaluation exercises. The inventor of the Science Citation Index warns against the indiscriminate use of these data. Fourteen year cumulative impact data for 10 leading medical journals provide a quantitative indicator of their long term influence. In the final analysis, impact simply reflects the ability of journals and editors to attract the best papers available.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                S1677-55382015000601058
                10.1590/S1677-5538.IBJU.2014.0497
                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

                Urology
                Journal Impact Factor,Urology,Nephrology,Periodicals as Topic
                Urology
                Journal Impact Factor, Urology, Nephrology, Periodicals as Topic

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