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Citation impact analysis of research papers that appear in oral and poster sessions: A case study of three computer science conferences

Shih-Wen Ke (Department of Information and Computer Engineering, Chung Yuan Christian University, Jhongli, Taiwan)
Wei-Chao Lin (Department of Computer Science and Information Engineering, Hwa Hsia Institute of Technology, Taipei, Taiwan)
Chih-Fong Tsai (Department of Information Management, National Central University, Jhongli, Taiwan)
Ya-Han Hu (Department of Information Management, National Chung Cheng University, Chia-yi, Taiwan)

Online Information Review

ISSN: 1468-4527

Article publication date: 9 September 2014

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Abstract

Purpose

Conference publications are an important aspect of research activities. There are generally both oral presentations and poster sessions at large international conferences. One can hypothesise that, for the same conferences, the papers presented in oral sessions should have a higher research impact than the papers presented in poster sessions. However, there has been no related study examining the validity of this hypothesis. In other words, the difference of research impact between papers presented orally or during poster sessions has not been discussed in literature. Therefore, the purpose of this paper is to conduct a citation analysis to compare the research impact of papers presented in oral and poster sessions.

Design/methodology/approach

In this paper, data from three leading conferences in the field of computer vision are examined, namely CVPR (2011 and 2012), ICCV (2011) and ECCV (2012). Several types of citation-related statistics are collected, including the number of highly cited papers (i.e. high number of citations) presented in oral and poster sessions, the total citations of both types of papers, the average citations of oral and poster papers, and the average citations of each frequently cited paper of both types.

Findings

There are three main findings. First, a larger proportion of highly cited papers are from oral sessions than poster sessions. Second, the average number of citations per paper is larger for those presented in oral sessions than poster sessions. Third, the average number of citations for highly cited papers presented in oral sessions is not necessarily greater than for the ones presented in poster sessions.

Originality/value

The originality of this paper is that it is the first attempt to examine the differences of citation impacts of conference papers presented in oral and poster sessions. The findings of this study will allow future bibliometrics research to further explore this related issue for longer periods and different fields.

Keywords

Citation

Ke, S.-W., Lin, W.-C., Tsai, C.-F. and Hu, Y.-H. (2014), "Citation impact analysis of research papers that appear in oral and poster sessions: A case study of three computer science conferences", Online Information Review, Vol. 38 No. 6, pp. 738-745. https://doi.org/10.1108/OIR-03-2014-0062

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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