Are medical articles highlighting detailed statistics more cited?

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DOI: https://doi.org/10.6018/analesdoc.18.2.225201
Keywords: Citation Analysis, Bootstrap, Bonferroni Correction, Effect Size

Abstract

When conducting a literature review, it is natural to search for articles and read their abstracts in order to select papers to read fully. Hence, informative abstracts are important to ensure that research is read. The description of a paper's methods may help to give confidence that a study is of high quality. This article assesses whether medical articles that mention three statistical methods, each of which is arguably indicative of a more detailed statistical analysis than average, are more highly cited. The results show that medical articles mentioning Bonferroni corrections, bootstrapping and effect size tend to be 7%, 8% and 15% more highly ranked for citations than average, respectively. Although this is consistent with the hypothesis that mentioning more detailed statistical techniques generate more highly cited research, these techniques may also tend to be used in more highly cited areas of Medicine.

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Published
25-06-2015
How to Cite
Thelwall, M. (2015). Are medical articles highlighting detailed statistics more cited?. Information Science Journal, 18(2). https://doi.org/10.6018/analesdoc.18.2.225201
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Ediciones de la Universidad de Murcia (Editum)