Whose research benefits more from Twitter? On Twitter-worthiness of communication research and its role in reinforcing disparities of the field

Publication date

2022-12

Authors

Chan, Chung Hong
Zeng, Jing
Schäfer, Mike S.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Twitter has become an important promotional tool for scholarly work, but individual academic publications have varied degrees of visibility on the platform. We explain this variation through the concept of Twitter-worthiness: factors making certain academic publications more likely to be visible on Twitter. Using publications from communication studies as our analytical case, we conduct statistical analyses of 32187 articles spanning 82 journals. Findings show that publications from G12 countries, covering social media topics and published open access tend to be mentioned more on Twitter. Similar to prior studies, this study demonstrates that Twitter mentions are associated with peer citations. Nevertheless, Twitter also has the potential to reinforce pre-existing disparities between communication research communities, especially between researchers from developed and less-developed regions. Open access, however, does not reinforce such disparities.

Keywords

General

Citation

Chan, C H, Zeng, J & Schäfer, M S 2022, 'Whose research benefits more from Twitter? On Twitter-worthiness of communication research and its role in reinforcing disparities of the field', PLoS One, vol. 17, e0278840. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0278840