Biochemia Medica, Vol. 30 No. 1, 2020.
Original scientific paper
https://doi.org/10.11613/BM.2020.010708
Title does matter: a cross-sectional study of 30 journals in the Medical Laboratory Technology category
Marina Njire Braticevic
orcid.org/0000-0001-8629-3008
; Department of Laboratory Diagnostics, Dubrovnik General Hospital, Dubrovnik, Croatia
Ivana Babic
; Department for NAT Testing of Blood Donors, Department of Molecular Diagnostics, Croatian Institute of Transfusion Medicine, Zagreb, Croatia
Irena Abramovic
; Department of Medical Biology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia
Anja Jokic
; Department of Medical Biochemistry, Haematology and Coagulation with Cytology, University Hospital for Infectious Diseases “Dr. Fran Mihaljević”, Zagreb, Croatia
Martina Horvat
; Department of Medical Laboratory Diagnostics, University Hospital Centre Split, Split, Croatia
Abstract
Introduction: First impression on potential readers is created by the title; therefore, authors should give importance to the title structure. The aim of this study was to establish whether articles created by a smaller number of authors and with shorter, descriptive or declarative titles gain more citations and whether article title length and number of authors correlate to the number of citations.
Material and methods: A cross-sectional study on article citation data for 30 scientific journals published in 2016 in Medical Laboratory Technology field according to Web of Science database was conducted. The type of article, type of title, as well as number of words in the title and number of authors was recorded.
Results: In the group of original articles (N = 2623), articles with declarative titles (N = 336, 13%) showed statistically higher number of citations in multiple comparison analysis when compared to descriptive titles (P < 0.001). No correlation was found between number of citations and title word count (r = 0.07, P < 0.001) nor between number of citations and number of authors in group of original articles (r = 0.09, P < 0.001). Original articles with descriptive titles longer than 15 words or with more than six authors are cited more (P = 0.005 and P < 0.001, respectively).
Conclusion: Based on results of our study, titles do matter. Therefore, authors of original articles might want to consider including their findings in the title and having longer titles.
Keywords
cross-sectional studies; medical laboratory technology; publications; bibliometrics
Hrčak ID:
234148
URI
Publication date:
15.2.2020.
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