Patrick Gaulé, Getting cited: does open access help?

Connotea Imports 2012-07-31

Summary:

Abstract: We reexamine the widely held belief that free availability of scientific articles increases the number of citations they receive. Since open access is relatively more attractive to authors of higher quality papers, regressing citations on open access and other controls yields upward-biased estimates. Using an instrumental variable approach, we find no significant effect of open access. Instead, self-selection of higher quality articles into open access explains at least part of the observed open access citation advantage. (Self-archived July 30, 2009.)

Link:

http://ideas.repec.org/p/cmi/wpaper/cemi-workingpaper-2008-007.html

Updated:

08/07/2009, 05:20

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » Connotea Imports

Tags:

oa.new oa.impact oa.citations oa.article

Authors:

petersuber

Date tagged:

07/31/2012, 23:23

Date published:

08/02/2009, 16:14