BACKGROUND
One measure of the impact of a medical article is how often it is cited in other articles. Many authors of articles published in dermatologic journals are seldom, if ever, cited while other authors are often cited.
OBJECTIVE
To identify the 25 authors whose publications in the dermatology literature were most often cited.
DESIGN
We obtained a citation database from the Institute for Scientific Information. From this database we separately quantified the total number of citations for each author and the total number of citations to first authors of original articles.
SETTING
Dermatology journals.
SUBJECTS
All authors of papers published in 24 dermatology journals between 1981 and 1996.
INTERVENTION
None.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE
Number of citations.
RESULTS
If all articles irrespective of the author's listing (eg, first or second) are counted, the top 25 cited authors in the dermatology literature from 1981 to 1996 were cited between 1480 and 4706 times. If only citations and articles of which an author was the first listed author are counted, the top 25 authors were cited between 400 and 813 times. Only 4 authors were among the top 25 cited authors by both criteria.
CONCLUSIONS
A relatively small proportion of all authors account for a high proportion of all citations of the dermatologic literature. The most frequently cited first authors of original articles were different in 84% of cases from the most often cited authors of all papers irrespective of the individuals placement in the authorship listing.
[1]
M. Shapiro,et al.
The contributions of authors to multiauthored biomedical research papers.
,
1994,
JAMA.
[2]
K. Burman,et al.
"Hanging from the masthead": reflections on authorship.
,
1982,
Annals of internal medicine.
[3]
K. Arndt,et al.
Organizational impact in the dermatologic literature.
,
1996,
Archives of dermatology.
[4]
K. Arndt,et al.
The impact of dermatology journals.
,
1995,
Archives of dermatology.
[5]
K A Arndt,et al.
Citation classics in clinical dermatologic journals. Citation analysis, biomedical journals, and landmark articles, 1945-1990.
,
1993,
Archives of dermatology.
[6]
R Bhopal,et al.
The vexed question of authorship: views of researchers in a British medical faculty
,
1997,
BMJ.