2014
DOI: 10.1007/s11192-014-1442-0
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Medical theses and derivative articles: dissemination of contents and publication patterns

Abstract: Doctoral theses are an important source of publication in universities, although little research has been carried out on the publications resulting from theses, on so-called derivative articles. This study investigates how derivative articles can be identified through a text analysis based on the full-text of a set of medical theses and the full-text of articles, with which they shared authorship. The text similarity analysis methodology applied consisted in exploiting the full-text articles according to organ… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…A study on UK medical PhDs completed in 2007-2011 found a 72,433 mean for words [7], a value larger than the ones we found: 58,969 for publication-based theses and 67,897 for traditional theses (see Table 2). …”
Section: Assessment Of Theses' Lengthcontrasting
confidence: 76%
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“…A study on UK medical PhDs completed in 2007-2011 found a 72,433 mean for words [7], a value larger than the ones we found: 58,969 for publication-based theses and 67,897 for traditional theses (see Table 2). …”
Section: Assessment Of Theses' Lengthcontrasting
confidence: 76%
“…Even more, arranging a manuscript to fit a journal's requirements can lead to rephrasing of the study's initial text. There are some that think textual analysis is a good method to detect thesis-related articles [7], but in our opinion it cannot always correctly detect all medical thesis-related articles. Thus, two independent researchers, with the same expertise and experience in medical research methods, browsed each thesis from our study and established, with full consensus, the number of studies elaborated and included in the thesis representing original research pieces the PhD student conducted.…”
Section: Data Collectionmentioning
confidence: 89%
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