Abstract
Journals occasionally solicit manuscripts for special collections, in
which all papers are focused on a particular topic within the journal’s
scope. For the Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, there
have been 51 special collections from 2005 through 2018, with a total of
1009 papers out of the 8881 total papers in the journal over those years
(11%). Taken together, the citations to special collection papers, as
well as other metrics, are essentially the same as the
non-special-collection papers. Several paper characteristics were
examined to assess whether they could explain the higher citation and
download values for SC papers, but they cannot. In addition, indirect
methods were conducted for assessing self-citations as an explanation
for the increased citations, but no evidence was found to support this
hypothesis. It was found that some paper types, notably Commentaries and
Technical Reports, have lower average citations but higher average
downloads than Research Articles (the most common type of paper in this
journal). This implies that such paper types have a different kind of
impact than “regular” science-result-focused papers. In addition to
having higher average citations and downloads, special collections focus
community attention on that particular research topic, providing a
deadline for manuscript submissions and a single webpage at which many
related papers are listed. It is concluded that special collections are
worth the extra community effort in organization, writing, and reviewing
these papers.