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首页> 外文期刊>BMC Veterinary Research >Geographic trends in research output and citations in veterinary medicine: insight into global research capacity, species specialization, and interdisciplinary relationships
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Geographic trends in research output and citations in veterinary medicine: insight into global research capacity, species specialization, and interdisciplinary relationships

机译:兽医学研究成果和引文的地理趋势:对全球研究能力,物种专业化和学科间关系的洞察

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Background Bibliographic data can be used to map the research quality and productivity of a discipline. We hypothesized that bibliographic data would identify geographic differences in research capacity, species specialization, and interdisciplinary relationships within the veterinary profession that corresponded with demographic and economic indices. Results Using the SCImago portal, we retrieved veterinary journal, article, and citation data in the Scopus database by year (1996–2011), region, country, and publication in species-specific journals (food animal, small animal, equine, miscellaneous), as designated by Scopus. In 2011, Scopus indexed 165 journals in the veterinary subject area, an increase from 111 in 1996. As a percentage of veterinary research output between 1996 and 2010, Western Europe and North America (US and Canada) together accounted for 60.9% of articles and 73.0% of citations. The number of veterinary articles increased from 8815 in 1996 to 19,077 in 2010 (net increase 66.6%). During this time, publications increased by 21.0% in Asia, 17.2% in Western Europe, and 17.0% in Latin America, led by Brazil, China, India, and Turkey. The United States had the highest number of articles in species-specific journals. As a percentage of regional output, the proportion of articles in small animal and equine journals was highest in North America and the proportion of articles in food animal journals was highest in Africa. Based on principal component analysis, total articles were highly correlated with gross domestic product (based on World Bank data). The proportion of articles in small animal and equine journals was associated with gross national income, research and development, and % urban population, as opposed to the proportion of food animal articles, agricultural output, and % rural population. Co-citations linked veterinary medicine with medicine in the United States, with basic sciences in Eastern Europe and the Far East, and with agriculture in most other regions and countries. Conclusions Bibliographic data reflect the demographic changes affecting veterinary medicine worldwide and provide insight into current and changing global research capacity, specialization, and interdisciplinary affiliations. A more detailed analysis of species-specific trends is warranted and could contribute to a better understanding of educational and workforce needs in veterinary medicine.
机译:背景书目数据可用于绘制学科的研究质量和生产率。我们假设书目数据将确定与人口统计和经济指标相对应的兽医专业研究能力,物种专业化和学科间关系的地理差异。结果使用SCImago门户网站,我们按年份(1996-2011),地区,国家/地区和特定物种期刊(食用动物,小型动物,马,杂类)的出版物检索了Scopus数据库中的兽医期刊,文章和引文数据,由Scopus指定。 2011年,Scopus对兽医学领域的165种期刊进行了索引,比1996年的111种有所增加。在1996年至2010年间,兽医学研究产出的百分比中,西欧和北美(美国和加拿大)占论文总数的60.9%, 73.0%的引用。兽医用品的数量从1996年的8815件增加到2010年的19077件(净增长66.6%)。在此期间,以巴西,中国,印度和土耳其为首的亚洲出版物发行量增长了21.0%,西欧增长了17.2%,拉丁美洲增长了17.0%。在物种特定期刊中,美国的文章数量最多。占地区产出的百分比中,小型动物和马类期刊中的文章比例在北美最高,而食用动物类期刊中的文章比例在非洲最高。根据主成分分析,文章总数与国内生产总值高度相关(根据世界银行的数据)。小型动物和马类期刊中的文章比例与国民总收入,研发和城市人口百分比有关,而食用动物文章,农业产量和农村人口百分比则与之相关。联合引用将兽医学与美国的医学,东欧和远东的基础科学以及大多数其他地区和国家的农业联系起来。结论书目数据反映了影响世界范围内兽药的人口统计学变化,并提供了对当前和不断变化的全球研究能力,专业化和跨学科关系的洞察力。有必要对特定物种的趋势进行更详细的分析,这可能有助于更好地了解兽药的教育和劳动力需求。

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