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Controlled experiment finds no detectable citation bump from Twitter promotion
by
Steen, David A.
, Wild, Alexander L.
, Márquez, Melissa C.
, Parsons, E. C. M.
, Cȏté, Isabelle M.
, Drew, Joshua A.
, Branch, Trevor A.
, Shiffman, David
, LaRue, Michelle
, David, Solomon R.
, Rabaiotti, D.
in
Bibliometrics
/ Biological Science Disciplines
/ Computer and Information Sciences
/ Distribution
/ Humans
/ Information management
/ Journal Impact Factor
/ Marketing
/ Medical research
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ Methods
/ People and Places
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Science Policy
/ Social Media
/ Social Sciences
2024
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Controlled experiment finds no detectable citation bump from Twitter promotion
by
Steen, David A.
, Wild, Alexander L.
, Márquez, Melissa C.
, Parsons, E. C. M.
, Cȏté, Isabelle M.
, Drew, Joshua A.
, Branch, Trevor A.
, Shiffman, David
, LaRue, Michelle
, David, Solomon R.
, Rabaiotti, D.
in
Bibliometrics
/ Biological Science Disciplines
/ Computer and Information Sciences
/ Distribution
/ Humans
/ Information management
/ Journal Impact Factor
/ Marketing
/ Medical research
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ Methods
/ People and Places
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Science Policy
/ Social Media
/ Social Sciences
2024
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Do you wish to request the book?
Controlled experiment finds no detectable citation bump from Twitter promotion
by
Steen, David A.
, Wild, Alexander L.
, Márquez, Melissa C.
, Parsons, E. C. M.
, Cȏté, Isabelle M.
, Drew, Joshua A.
, Branch, Trevor A.
, Shiffman, David
, LaRue, Michelle
, David, Solomon R.
, Rabaiotti, D.
in
Bibliometrics
/ Biological Science Disciplines
/ Computer and Information Sciences
/ Distribution
/ Humans
/ Information management
/ Journal Impact Factor
/ Marketing
/ Medical research
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ Methods
/ People and Places
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Science Policy
/ Social Media
/ Social Sciences
2024
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Controlled experiment finds no detectable citation bump from Twitter promotion
Journal Article
Controlled experiment finds no detectable citation bump from Twitter promotion
2024
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Overview
Multiple studies across a variety of scientific disciplines have shown that the number of times that a paper is shared on Twitter (now called X) is correlated with the number of citations that paper receives. However, these studies were not designed to answer whether tweeting about scientific papers causes an increase in citations, or whether they were simply highlighting that some papers have higher relevance, importance or quality and are therefore both tweeted about more and cited more. The authors of this study are leading science communicators on Twitter from several life science disciplines, with substantially higher follower counts than the average scientist, making us uniquely placed to address this question. We conducted a three-year-long controlled experiment, randomly selecting five articles published in the same month and journal, and randomly tweeting one while retaining the others as controls. This process was repeated for 10 articles from each of 11 journals, recording Altmetric scores, number of tweets, and citation counts before and after tweeting. Randomization tests revealed that tweeted articles were downloaded 2.6–3.9 times more often than controls immediately after tweeting, and retained significantly higher Altmetric scores (+81%) and number of tweets (+105%) three years after tweeting. However, while some tweeted papers were cited more than their respective control papers published in the same journal and month, the overall increase in citation counts after three years (+7% for Web of Science and +12% for Google Scholar) was not statistically significant ( p > 0.15). Therefore while discussing science on social media has many professional and societal benefits (and has been a lot of fun), increasing the citation rate of a scientist’s papers is likely not among them.
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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