OHNS 文献中的勘误和更正。

Mihai A Bentan, John E Fenton, Daniel H Coelho
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:分析耳鼻咽喉头颈外科(OHNS)顶级期刊中错误发表的趋势。方法: 利用特定期刊的搜索引擎进行回顾性文献计量分析:利用期刊专用搜索引擎对耳鼻咽喉头颈外科(OHNS)排名前 30 的期刊(按影响因子)进行回顾性文献计量学分析,查询 "勘误或勘误表或更正或更正表或更正或更正",利用 2000 年至 2023 年期间发表的错误。更正分为 "勘误 "和 "更正 "两类,"勘误 "指的是源于期刊的错误,"更正 "指的是源于作者的错误。根据错误对结果的影响程度或读者对错误的理解,将错误的严重程度分为微不足道、轻微或严重。结果:在分析的 739 个错误中,62.5%(n = 462)为勘误,37.5%(n = 277)为更正,平均每本期刊有 26.39 (±27.5) 个错误。影响因子与错误发生率之间没有相关性(P = .979)。多年来,发表的错误数量呈上升趋势。原始文章发表日期与错误发生日期之间的平均持续时间为 10.8 个月(±19.4 个月),但影响因子与这一持续时间之间没有显著相关性(P = .953)。大多数被更正的文章是原创研究文章(n = 568,76.9%),第一作者主要来自美国(n = 262,36.1%)。大多数错误涉及作者身份(n = 273,36.9%),严重程度为 "琐碎"(n = 544,73.6%)。然而,72 个错误(9.7%)属于 "重大 "错误,严重改变了文章的研究结果或解释。结论耳鼻喉科领域存在大量错误。尽管大多数错误无关紧要且影响作者身份,但约有10%的错误会严重影响文章的结论/结果:4.
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Errata and Corrigenda in the OHNS Literature.

Objectives: To analyze trends in error publication in the top Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery (OHNS) journals. Methods: A retrospective bibliometric analysis utilizing journal-specific search engines of the top 30 OHNS journals (by impact factor) were queried for "errata OR erratum OR corrigenda OR corrigendum OR correction OR corrections," utilizing errors published between 2000 and 2023. Corrections were classified into "erratum" for errors originating from the journal and "corrigendum" for errors originating from the author. Error severity was categorized as trivial, minor, or major, based on the magnitude of their impact on outcomes or their interpretation by the reader. Results: Of the 739 analyzed errors, 62.5% (n = 462) were errata and 37.5% (n = 277) corrigenda, averaging 26.39 (±27.5) errors per journal. There was no correlation between impact factor and error occurrence (P = .979). Trends demonstrated growing numbers of errors published over the years. Mean duration between the publication date of the original article and the error was 10.8 months (±19.4 months), but there was no significant correlation between impact factor and this duration (P = .953). Most corrected articles were original research articles (n = 568, 76.9%), predominantly with the first author from the United States (n = 262, 36.1%). Most errors involved authorship (n = 273, 36.9%) and were "Trivial" in severity (n = 544, 73.6%). However, 72 (9.7%) errors were "Major" and altered the article's findings or interpretation significantly. Conclusion: A multitude of errors exist in the otolaryngology field. Despite most being insignificant and affecting authorship, roughly 10% significantly affect an article's conclusions/outcomes.Level of Evidence: 4.

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