In recent months the COVID-19 (also known as SARS-CoV-2 and Coronavirus) pandemic has spread throughout the world. In parallel, extensive scholarly research regarding various aspects of the pandemic has been published. In this work, we analyse the changes in biomedical publishing patterns due to the pandemic. We study the changes in the volume of publications in both peer reviewed journals and preprint servers, average time to acceptance of papers submitted to biomedical journals, international (co-)authorship of these papers (expressed by diversity and volume), and the possible association between journal metrics and said changes. We study these possible changes using two approaches: a short-term analysis through which changes during the first six months of the outbreak are examined for both COVID-19 related papers and non-COVID-19 related papers; and a longitudinal approach through which changes are examined in comparison to the previous four years. Our results show that the pandemic has so far had a tremendous effect on all examined accounts of scholarly publications: A sharp increase in publication volume has been witnessed and it can be almost entirely attributed to the pandemic; a significantly faster mean time to acceptance for COVID-19 papers is apparent, and it has (partially) come at the expense of non-COVID-19 papers; and a significant reduction in international collaboration for COVID-19 papers has also been identified. As the pandemic continues to spread, these changes may cause a slow down in research in non-COVID-19 biomedical fields and bring about a lower rate of international collaboration.
翻译:近几个月来,COVID-19(又称SARS-COV-2和Corona病毒)大流行(COVID-19)(又称SARS-COV-2和Corona病毒)在全世界蔓延。与此同时,我们利用两种方法研究了这些可能的变化:短期分析,通过短期分析,对爆发头六个月期间的变化进行了研究,对与该流行病有关的COVID-19相关论文和非COVID-19相关论文进行了研究;对同行审查的期刊和预印服务器出版物数量的变化进行了研究;对接受提交生物医学期刊、国际(合著)的论文的平均时间进行了研究;这些论文(以多样性和数量表示)的国际(以出版物量表示)以及这些出版物和上述变化之间可能存在的联系。我们利用两种方法研究了这些可能的变化:即短期分析,通过短期分析,对爆发头六个月期间的变化进行了研究,对COVID-19相关论文和非CVI-19相关论文进行了研究;与前四年相比,从长远来看,对变化进行了研究。我们发现,该流行病对所有学术出版物的叙述产生了巨大的影响:出版物数量急剧增加,几乎可以归咎于该类D-19的论文在I文件方面没有被接受。