The rapid, massive growth of COVID-19 authors in the scientific literature

John P.A. Ioannidis, Maia Salholz-Hillel, Kevin W. Boyack, Jeroen Baas

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

71 Scopus citations

Abstract

We examined the extent to which the scientific workforce in different fields was engaged in publishing COVID-19-related papers. According to Scopus (data cut, 1 August 2021), 210 183 COVID-19-related publications included 720 801 unique authors, of which 360 005 authors had published at least five full papers in their career and 23 520 authors were at the top 2% of their scientific subfield based on a career-long composite citation indicator. The growth of COVID-19 authors was far more rapid and massive compared with cohorts of authors historically publishing on H1N1, Zika, Ebola, HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis. All 174 scientific subfields had some specialists who had published on COVID-19. In 109 of the 174 subfields of science, at least one in 10 active, influential (top 2% composite citation indicator) authors in the subfield had authored something on COVID-19. Fifty-three hyper-prolific authors had already at least 60 (and up to 227) COVID-19 publications each. Among the 300 authors with the highest composite citation indicator for their COVID-19 publications, most common countries were USA (n = 67), China (n = 52), UK (n = 32) and Italy (n = 18). The rapid and massive involvement of the scientific workforce in COVID-19-related work is unprecedented and creates opportunities and challenges. There is evidence for hyper-prolific productivity.

Original languageEnglish
Article number210389
JournalRoyal Society Open Science
Volume8
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 7 2021
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • authorship
  • bibliometrics
  • citations
  • COVID-19
  • productivity

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