
TL;DR
This study reveals that clinical research papers tend to receive fewer citations than basic science papers, highlighting a systemic citation disadvantage that may influence research funding and policy decisions.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new paper-level indicator to quantify the basic or clinical orientation of biomedical research and demonstrates its systematic citation disadvantage for clinical studies.
Findings
Clinical papers receive fewer citations than basic science papers.
Clinical research has higher citation variance.
Citation gap persists even with longer citation windows.
Abstract
Biomedical research encompasses diverse types of activities, from basic science ("bench") to clinical medicine ("bedside") to bench-to-bedside translational research. It, however, remains unclear whether different types of research receive citations at varying rates. Here we aim to answer this question by using a newly proposed paper-level indicator that quantifies the extent to which a paper is basic science or clinical medicine. Applying this measure to 5 million biomedical papers, we find a systematic citation disadvantage of clinical oriented papers; they tend to garner far fewer citations and are less likely to be hit works than papers oriented towards basic science. At the same time, clinical research has a higher variance in its citation. We also find that the citation difference between basic and clinical research decreases, yet still persists, if longer citation-window is used.…
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