Demographic and Citation Trends in Astrophysical Journal papers and Preprints
Greg J. Schwarz, Robert C. Kennicutt Jr

TL;DR
This study analyzes how astro-ph preprint posting influences citation rates and author demographics in ApJ papers from 1999 and 2002, revealing that preprints significantly boost citations and vary across subfields.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive statistical analysis of preprint posting habits, citation impacts, and demographic trends in astrophysics research, highlighting the role of astro-ph in dissemination.
Findings
72% of ApJ papers posted on astro-ph by 2002
Preprinted papers are cited more than twice as often
Preprint posting varies widely among subfields
Abstract
We have used data from ADS, AAS, and astro-ph, to study the publishing, preprint posting, and citation patterns for papers published in the ApJ in 1999 and 2002. This allowed us to track statistical trends in author demographics, preprint posting habits, and citation rates for ApJ papers as a whole and across various subgroups and types of ApJ papers. The most interesting results are the frequencies of use of the astro-ph server across various subdisciplines of astronomy, and the impact that such posting has on the citation history of the subsequent ApJ papers. By 2002 72% of ApJ papers were posted as astro-ph preprints, but this fraction varies from 22-95% among the subfields studied. A majority of these preprints (61%) were posted after the papers were accepted at ApJ, and 88% were posted or updated after acceptance. On average, ApJ papers posted on astro-ph are cited more than twice…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAcademic Publishing and Open Access · scientometrics and bibliometrics research
