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Geographic origin of publications in radiological journals as a function of GDP and percentage of GDP spent on research.

机译:放射学期刊出版物的地理起源与GDP的关系以及在研究上花费的GDP百分比。

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RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to examine the geographic origin of publications in the highest impacting radiology journals and to examine the link between the percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) spent on research by a country and the output of radiology publications. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The five highest impacting general radiology journals (according to the ISI Web of Knowledge database) were selected over a 6-year period from January 2002 to December 2007. Publications were totaled according to the country of the corresponding author. Publications (total and corrected for population size) were assessed according to the GDP of a given country and the percentage of GDP spent on research in that country. Correlation was determined using Spearman's rank. RESULTS: In total, 10,925 papers were identified. The top 10 nations produced 83.9% of the total number of papers. The United States was the most prolific country, with 41.7% of the total. The second-ranked and third-ranked countries were Germany (11.6%) and Japan (6.7%). Corrected for GDP, smaller European countries outperformed larger nations. Switzerland (0.925 publications per billion of GDP), Austria (0.694 publications per billion of GDP), and Belgium (0.648 publications per billion of GDP) produced the most papers per billion of GDP. When corrected for percentage of GDP spent on research, European countries again ranked highest, with Greece, Turkey, and Belgium having the best ratios. The percentage of GDP spent on research was positively correlated with the number of publications in high-ranking radiology journals (r = 0.603, P < .001). CONCLUSIONS: The United States is the most productive country in absolute number of publications. The flaws of using population size to compare publication output are clear, and a comparison using GDP and the percentage of GDP spent on research may give more meaningful results. When GDP is taken into consideration, smaller European countries are more productive. The importance of investment in radiologic research is emphasized by the association between increased funding of research and the number of publications in high-impacting radiology journals.
机译:理由和目标:这项研究的目的是检查影响最大的放射学期刊出版物的地理来源,并研究一个国家在研究上花费的国内生产总值(GDP)百分比与放射学出版物输出之间的联系。 。材料与方法:从2002年1月至2007年12月的6年中,选择了影响最大的5篇普通放射学期刊(根据ISI知识网数据库)。根据相应作者所在的国家/地区对出版物进行了汇总。根据给定国家的GDP以及该国在研究上花费的GDP百分比评估出版物(总数和校正后的人口规模)。使用Spearman等级确定相关性。结果:总共鉴定了10,925篇论文。前十个国家的论文产量占总数的83​​.9%。美国是最多产的国家,占总数的41.7%。排名第二和第三的国家是德国(11.6%)和日本(6.7%)。对GDP进行校正后,较小的欧洲国家的表现优于较大的国家。瑞士(每十亿GDP的0.925出版物),奥地利(每十亿GDP的0.694出版物)和比利时(每十亿GDP的0.648出版物)产生的论文最多。如果按照研究支出占GDP的百分比进行校正,则欧洲国家再次排名最高,希腊,土耳其和比利时的比例最高。用于研究的GDP百分比与高级放射学期刊的出版物数量呈正相关(r = 0.603,P <.001)。结论:在绝对出版物数量上,美国是生产力最高的国家。使用人口规模比较出版物产出的缺陷很明显,使用GDP和GDP所占百分比进行比较可能会得出更有意义的结果。考虑到GDP,较小的欧洲国家的生产力更高。研究经费的增加与高影响力放射学期刊的出版物数量之间的联系强调了放射学研究投资的重要性。

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