Publication
Title
Performance-based publisher ratings and the visibility/impact of books : small fish in a big pond, or big fish in a small pond?
Author
Abstract
This study compares publisher ratings to the visibility and impact of individual books, based on a 2017 data set from three Nordic performance-based research funding systems (PRFS) (Denmark, Norway, and Finland). Although there are Journal Impact Factors (JIFs) for journals, there is no similar indicator for book publishers. National publisher lists are used instead to account for the general “quality” of books, leading to institutional rewards. But, just as the JIF is not recommended as a proxy for the “citedness” of a paper, a publisher rating is also not recommended as a proxy for the impact of an individual book. We introduce a small fish in a big pond versus big fish in a small pond metaphor, where a “fish” is a book and “the pond” represents its publishing house. We investigate how books fit on this metaphorical fish and pond continuum, using WorldCat holdings (visibility) and Google Scholar citations (impact), and test other variables to determine their predictive value with respect to these two indicators. Our statistics show that publisher levels do not have predictive value when other variables are held constant. This has implications for PRFS and book evaluations in general, as well as ongoing developments related to a newly proposed international publisher registry.
Language
English
Source (journal)
Quantitative science studies / International Society for Scientometrics and Informetrics. - Cambridge, MA, 2020, currens
Publication
Cambridge, MA : The MIT Press , 2021
ISSN
2641-3337
DOI
10.1162/QSS_A_00134
Volume/pages
2 :2 (2021) , p. 588-615
ISI
000753939000010
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (open access)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Publication type
Subject
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
VABB-SHW
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 20.08.2021
Last edited 29.08.2024
To cite this reference