Author/Authors :
Patel, Vanash M. Imperial College London - St Mary’s Hospital - Department of Surgery and Cancer, UK , Ashrafian, Hutan Imperial College London - St Mary’s Hospital - Department of Surgery and Cancer, UK , Almoudaris, Alex Imperial College London - St Mary’s Hospital - Department of Surgery and Cancer, UK , Makanjuola, Jonathan Imperial College London - St Mary’s Hospital - Department of Surgery and Cancer, UK , Bucciarelli-Ducci, Chiara Bristol Heart Institute - NIHR Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit, UK , Darzi, Ara Imperial College London - St Mary’s Hospital - Department of Surgery and Cancer, UK , Athanasiou, Thanos Imperial College London - St Mary’s Hospital - Department of Surgery and Cancer, UK
Abstract :
Objectives: To compare H index scores for healthcare researchers returned by Google Scholar, Web of Science and Scopus databases, and to assess whether a researcher’s age, country of institutional affiliation and physician status influences calculations. Subjects and Methods: One hundred and ninety-five Nobel laureates in Physiology and Medicine from 1901 to 2009 were considered. Year of first and last publications, total publications and citation counts, and the H index for each laureate were calculated from each database. Cronbach’s alpha statistics was used to measure the reliability of H index scores between the databases. Laureate characteristic influence on the H index was analysed using linear regression. Results: There was no concordance between the databases when considering the number of publications and citations count per laureate. The H index was the most reliably calculated bibliometric across the three databases (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.900). All databases returned significantly higher H index scores for younger laureates (p 0.0001). Google Scholar and Web of Science returned significantly higher H index for physician laureates (p = 0.025 and p = 0.029, respectively). Country of institutional affiliation did not influence the H index in any database. Conclusion: The H index appeared to be the most consistently calculated bibliometric between the databases for Nobel laureates in Physiology and Medicine. Researcher-specific characteristics constituted an important component of objective research assessment. The findings of this study call to question the choice of current and future academic performance databases.
Keywords :
H index , Benchmarking , Health services research , Bibliographic databases