CLASSIFICATION OF PAPERS IN MULTIDISCIPLINARY JOURNALS
A feature of
Essential
Science IndicatorsSM is the reclassification of
papers from multidisciplinary journals into the 22 Essential
Science Indicators standard
fields. Of the roughly
9,000 journals scanned for Essential Science Indicators, most
are highly specialized and thus can be uniquely assigned to one of the
fields. Approximately 60 journals, including journals such as
Science, Nature, and the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences of the USA (PNAS), are
classified as multidisciplinary since they publish research reports in
many different fields. Until now, papers in these journals have been
counted as Multidisciplinary despite the fact that many of them are
highly specialized and represent research in specific fields, such as
immunology, physics, neuroscience, etc.
Thus, an automated procedure was put into place, similar to one used
for many years by the
Research Services
Group at Thomson Reuters. Papers are assigned to a field
based on the field representation of the citing journals and cited
journals. For example, if the majority of the citations to a paper
published in a multidisciplinary journal come from neuroscience
journals and the majority of the cited references in the paper are
to neuroscience journals, the paper will be assigned to
neuroscience. In short, a paper is assigned to the field in which
the largest number of its references and citations are classified.
This procedure is applied to the roughly 170,000 papers in the 60
multidisciplinary journals with the result that roughly one-half of the
articles are reclassified in one of the Essential Science
Indicators fields. The rate of reclassification varies widely with
journal. For example, for Science, Nature, and
PNAS, the average rate of reassignment is much
higher—about 95 percent. The benefit of reclassification for
Essential Science Indicators users is that statistics for
fields, including author, institution, country, journal and paper
rankings, more accurately reflect all papers in these fields, including
those found in multidisciplinary journals, some of which publish
influential, highly cited research reports.
Should you have further questions, please
contact us.