Five-year institutional bibliometric profiles for 103 US neurosurgical residency programs

Douglas R. Taylor, Garrett T. Venable, G. Morgan Jones, Jacob R. Lepard, Mallory L. Roberts, Nabil Saleh, Said K. Sidiqi, Andrew Moore, Nickalus Khan, Nathan R. Selden, L. Madison Michael, Paul Klimo

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    34 Scopus citations

    Abstract

    OBJECT?Various bibliometric indices based on the citations accumulated by scholarly articles, incluDing the h-index, g-index, e-index, and Google's i10-index, may be used to evaluate academic productivity in neurological surgery. The present article provides a comprehensive assessment of recent academic publishing output from 103 US neurosurgical residency programs and investigates intradepartmental publishing equality among faculty members. Methods Each institution was considered a single entity, with the 5-year academic yield of every neurosurgical faculty member compiled to compute the following indices: ih(5), cumulative h, ig(5), ie(5), and i10(5) (based on publications and citations from 2009 through 2013). Intradepartmental comparison of productivity among faculty members yielded Gini coefficients for publications and citations. National and regional comparisons, institutional rankings, and intradepartmental publishing equality measures are presented. Results The median numbers of departmental faculty, total publications and citations, ih(5), summed h, ig(5), ie(5), i10(5), and Gini coefficients for publications and citations were 13, 82, 716, 12, 144, 23, 16, 17, 0.57, and 0.71, respectively. The top 5 most academically productive neurosurgical programs based on ih(5)-index were University of California, San Francisco, University of California, Los Angeles, University of Pittsburgh, Brigham & Women's Hospital, and Johns Hopkins University. The Western US region was most academically productive and displayed greater intradepartmental publishing equality (median ih[5]-index = 18, median Ginipub = 0.56). In all regions, large departments with relative intradepartmental publishing equality tend to be the most academically productive. Multivariable logistic regression analysis identified the ih(5)-index as the only independent predictor of intradepartmental publishing equality (Ginipub ? 0.5 [OR 1.20, 95% CI 1.20-1.40, p = 0.03]). Con clusion s The ih(5)-index is a novel, simple, and intuitive metric capable of accurately comparing the recent scholarly efforts of neurosurgical programs and accurately predicting intradepartmental publication equality. The ih(5)-index is relatively insensitive to factors such as isolated highly productive and/or no longer academically active senior faculty, which tend to distort other bibliometric indices and mask the accurate identification of currently productive academic environments. Institutional ranking by ih(5)-index may provide information of use to faculty and trainee applicants, research funDing institutions, program leaders, and other stakeholders.

    Original languageEnglish (US)
    Pages (from-to)547-560
    Number of pages14
    JournalJournal of neurosurgery
    Volume123
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Sep 2015

    Keywords

    • Bibliometrics
    • E-index
    • G-index
    • Gini coefficient
    • H-index
    • I10-index
    • Institutional
    • Neurosurgery
    • Rank
    • Regional
    • United States

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Surgery
    • Clinical Neurology

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Five-year institutional bibliometric profiles for 103 US neurosurgical residency programs'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this