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On the relationship between download and citation counts: An introduction of Granger-causality inference
Authors:Beibei Hu  Yang Ding  Xianlei Dong  Yi Bu  Ying Ding
Institution:1. School of Business, Shandong Normal University, Jinan 250358, China;2. Department of Information Management, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China;3. School of Information, University of Texas, Austin, TX 78701, USA;4. Dell Medical School, University of Texas, Austin, TX 78701, USA
Abstract:Studies on the relationship between the numbers of citations and downloads of scientific publications is beneficial for understanding the mechanism of citation patterns and research evaluation. However, seldom studies have considered directionality issues between downloads and citations or adopted a case-by-case time lag length between the download and citation time series of each individual publication. In this paper, we introduce the Granger-causal inference strategy to study the directionality between downloads and citations and set up the length of time lag between the time series for each case. By researching the publications on the Lancet, we find that publications have various directionality patterns, but highly cited publications tend to feature greater possibilities to have Granger causality. We apply a step-by-step manner to introduce the Granger-causal inference method to information science as four steps, namely conducting stationarity tests, determining time lag between time series, establishing cointegration test, and implementing Granger-causality inference. We hope that this method can be applied by future information scientists in their own research contexts.
Keywords:Granger causality  Citation  Download  Scientific publications
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