Causal Impact of Web Browsing and Other Factors on Research Publications.

2020 
In this paper, we study the causal impact of the web-search activity on the research publication. We considered observational prospective study design, where research activity of 267 scientists is being studied. We considered the Poisson and negative binomial regression model for our analysis. Based on the Akaike's Model selection criterion, we found the negative binomial regression performs better than the Poisson regression. Detailed analysis indicates that the higher web-search activity of 2016 related to the sci-indexed website has a positive significant impact on the research publication of 2017. We observed that unique collaborations of 2016 and web-search activity of 2016 have a non-linear but significant positive impact on the research publication of 2017. What-if analysis indicates the high web browsing activity leads to more number of the publication. However, interestingly we see a scientist with low web activity can be as productive as others if her/his maximum hits are the sci-indexed journal. That is if the scientist uses web browsing only for research-related activity, then she/he can be equally productive even if her/his web activity is lower than fellow scientists.
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