Rise of the Rest: The Growing Impact of Non-Elite Journals
Anurag Acharya, Alex Verstak, Helder Suzuki, Sean Henderson, Mikhail, Iakhiaev, Cliff Chiung Yu Lin, Namit Shetty

TL;DR
This study analyzes the increasing influence of non-elite journals from 1995 to 2013, showing a rise in high-impact articles and citations in these venues across various research fields.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive longitudinal analysis of the growing impact and citation share of non-elite journals in scholarly communication.
Findings
Fraction of top-cited articles in non-elite journals increased from 1995 to 2013.
Citations to non-elite journal articles grew from 27% to 47% over the period.
Many research areas now have over half of citations directed to non-elite journals.
Abstract
In this paper, we examine the evolution of the impact of non-elite journals. We attempt to answer two questions. First, what fraction of the top-cited articles are published in non-elite journals and how has this changed over time. Second, what fraction of the total citations are to non-elite journals and how has this changed over time. We studied citations to articles published in 1995-2013. We computed the 10 most-cited journals and the 1000 most-cited articles each year for all 261 subject categories in Scholar Metrics. We marked the 10 most-cited journals in a category as the elite journals for the category and the rest as non-elite. There are two conclusions from our study. First, the fraction of top-cited articles published in non-elite journals increased steadily over 1995-2013. While the elite journals still publish a substantial fraction of high-impact articles, many more…
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Taxonomy
Topicsscientometrics and bibliometrics research · Academic Publishing and Open Access
