Statistical validation of a global model for the distribution of the ultimate number of citations accrued by papers published in a scientific journal

Stringer MJ, Sales-Pardo M, Amaral LAN
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 61,  1377 - 1385 (2010)
Times cited: 31
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Abstract

A central issue in evaluative bibliometrics is the char- acterization of the citation distribution of papers in the scientific literature. Here, we perform a large-scale empir- ical analysis of journals from every field in Thomson Reuters’ Web of Science database. We find that only 30 of the 2,184 journals have citation distributions that are inconsistent with a discrete lognormal distribution at the rejection threshold that controls the false discovery rate at 0.05. We find that large, multidisciplinary journals are over-represented in this set of 30 journals, leading us to conclude that, within a discipline, citation distributions are lognormal. Our results strongly suggest that the dis- crete lognormal distribution is a globally accurate model for the distribution of “eventual impact” of scientific papers published in single-discipline journal in a single year that is removed sufficiently from the present date.