@文章{信息:doi/10.2196/15607,作者=“Bardus, Marco and El Rassi, Rola and Chahrour, Mohamad and Akl, Elie W and Raslan, Abdul Sattar and Meho, Lokman I and Akl, Elie A”,标题=“Social Media to Increase Impact of Health Research: Systematic Review”,期刊=“J Med Internet Res”,年=“2020”,月=“7”,日=“6”,卷=“22”,号=“7”,页=“e15607”,关键词=“Social Media;研究;文献计量学;Altmetrics;期刊影响因子;转化医学研究",摘要="背景:所有学科的学者越来越多地使用社会媒体在互联网上分享他们的出版物,以接触不同的受众。在过去的几年里,社会媒体影响的具体指标(如Altmetrics)已经被开发出来,以补充传统的文献计量指标(如引用数和h指数)。在健康研究中,尚不清楚社交媒体的影响是否也会转化为研究影响。目的:本研究的主要目的是系统地回顾有关使用社交媒体对健康研究传播影响的文献。第二个目的是评估Altmetrics和传统的基于引用的指标之间的相关性。 Methods: We conducted a systematic review to identify studies that evaluated the use of social media to disseminate research published in health-related journals. We specifically looked at studies that described experimental or correlational studies linking the use of social media with outcomes related to bibliometrics. We searched the Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online (MEDLINE), Excerpta Medica dataBASE (EMBASE), and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) databases using a predefined search strategy (International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews: CRD42017057709). We conducted independent and duplicate study selection and data extraction. Given the heterogeneity of the included studies, we summarized the findings through a narrative synthesis. Results: Of a total of 18,624 retrieved citations, we included 51 studies: 7 (14{\%}) impact studies (answering the primary aim) and 44 (86{\%}) correlational studies (answering the secondary aim). Impact studies reported mixed results with several limitations, including the use of interventions of inappropriately low intensity and short duration. The majority of correlational studies suggested a positive association between traditional bibliometrics and social media metrics (eg, number of mentions) in health research. Conclusions: We have identified suggestive yet inconclusive evidence on the impact of using social media to increase the number of citations in health research. Further studies with better design are needed to assess the causal link between social media impact and bibliometrics. ", issn="1438-8871", doi="10.2196/15607", url="//www.mybigtv.com/2020/7/e15607", url="https://doi.org/10.2196/15607", url="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32628113" }
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