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Medical and health sciences’ community attitudes towards hybrid journals, academic networks, social media and research evaluation metrics: a perspective from Greece

Dimitrios Kouis, Eirini Delikoura

Abstract


Purpose The present paper attempts to identify medical and health scientists' attitude towards the use of hybrid journals, social media and academic networks and the selection factors of publication medium, including alternative metrics.

Design/methodology/approach - A quantitative survey was conducted, based on a structured questionnaire. It focused on Health Sciences and Medicine, with a population sample mainly consisting of hospital healthcare professionals. Likert scale, simple multiple-choice and ranking type questions were used.

Analysis: 215 completed questionnaires were gathered and various statistical parameters were correlated with the demographic data (profession, experience, gender).

Findings - Most participants agreed that publishing in hybrid journals results in a significantly high cost for the authors which cannot be paid without funding support and probably affects the validity of the evaluation procedures. They also agreed that an open article published in a hybrid journal needs a shorter time for the peer review process, receives more citations and contributes essentially to the research process. Most of the participants use or would like to use ResearchGate and Google Scholar services. Social media involvement was considerably low in participants' responses. The number of publications and the prestige / credibility of the publishing media are considered to be the most important factors in research evaluation and in publishing media selection respectively.

Originality/value - No survey has been reported recently that focuses on health professionals' attitude towards Open Access movement in Greece. It is valuable to explore this community’s attitude because of their extremely active publishing profile, which decisively affects their career and largely contributes to research progress and national innovation.


Keywords


hybrid journals; academic networks; social media; research evaluation metrics; medical and health sciences; Open Access

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DOI: 10.26265/jiim.v5i2.4473

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