Academics who want to rise up the citations lists would do well to come up with snappy titles for their papers or even fall back on textspeak.
That is the clear implication of a by Adrian Letchford and colleagues at Warwick Business School just published in the online journal, Royal Society Open Science, entitled 鈥淭he advantage of short paper titles鈥.
Others before them have looked at whether brevity in the title of a journal article (and even the presence of colons and question marks), has an impact on the citation rates which can make so much difference to promotion prospects.
But Dr Letchford and his team have drawn on a far larger sample of 140,000 papers, representing the 20,000 most cited on the Scopus bibliometric platform for each year from 2007 to 2013.
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The central finding is absolutely clear: 鈥減apers with shorter titles receive more citations鈥. Yet, since citation levels are obviously linked to the prestige of different journals, what happens when we control for this factor?
Once such adjustments are made, the paper concludes, 鈥渢he strength of the evidence for the relationship between title length and citations received is reduced鈥 (though not eliminated). On the other hand, 鈥渏ournals which publish papers with shorter titles tend to receive more citations per paper鈥.
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The authors go on to speculate why this might be. Perhaps 鈥渉igh-impact journals鈥estrict the length of their papers鈥 titles鈥 or 鈥渋ncremental research鈥 gets 鈥減ublished under longer titles in less prestigious journals鈥. It might even be that shorter titles are (on average) 鈥渆asier to understand, enabling wider readership and increasing the influence of a paper鈥.
Whatever the explanation, researchers and editors may be wise to sit up and take notice.
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