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  1. Home > Articles & Issues >
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  3. The significant diff ...
Conference paper

The significant difference in impact: An exploratory study about the meaning and value of metrics for open access monographs

Sofie Wennström (1), Gabor Schubert (1), Graham Stone ORCID (2), Jeroen Sondervan (3) (4)
(1) Stockholm University Library
(2) JISC
(3) Utrecht University [Utrecht]
(4) Universiteit Utrecht / Utrecht University [Utrecht]
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Publication details
Submitted on
May 31, 2019
Accepted on
June 11, 2019
Published on
June 11, 2019
Last modified on
March 31, 2025
Proceedings 2
Academic publishing and digital bibliodiversity
Short Papers
DOI
10.4000/proceedings.elpub.2019.9
Indicators
376
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205
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The significant difference in impact: An exploratory study about the meaning and value of metrics for open access monographs

Sofie Wennström (1), Gabor Schubert (1), Graham Stone ORCID (2), Jeroen Sondervan (3) (4)
(1) Stockholm University Library
(2) JISC
(3) Utrecht University [Utrecht]
(4) Universiteit Utrecht / Utrecht University [Utrecht]
Abstract
This paper analyses usage statistics, citation data and altmetrics from a university press publishing open access monographs. The bibliometric data is then contrasted to the outcome of a survey of attitudes and behaviour among authors and editors who have published open access books. The metrics indicate that downloads and citations depend on the community of practice of the intended audience within each specific academic discipline, as well as the content itself. There is, for example, a clear difference in usage patterns between monographs and anthologies. The altmetric data used in the study indicate how users interact with the published books online. The data suggests, despite the small sample, that authors can to a greater extent influence how their book is discovered by the readership. It would, therefore, be relevant for authors to become more aware of the type of metrics available and how they can be interpreted and used for better understanding of how the book can reach its intended audience. Further studies are needed, and publishers of open access books are encouraged to share data for benchmarking and development of best practices.
Keywords
  • [SHS.INFO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciences
  • impact
  • open access
  • monographs
  • books
  • mixed method
  • altmetrics
  • metrics
Cited by

Source: OpenCitations

  • An altmetric attention advantage for open access books in the humanities and social sciences

    Wolverhampton Intellectual Repository and E-Theses (University of Wolverhampton)

    Authors : Michael Taylor ORCID

    Journal reference : Volume 125, 2020, pp. 2523-2543

    DOI : 10.1007/s11192-020-03735-8
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