Mapping Malaysia’s contribution to Gold Open Access: Growth patterns, disparities, and policy implications

This study examines the growth of Gold Open Access (OA) research output in Malaysia through a bibliometric analysis using Web of Science (WoS) data. Over the past decade, Malaysia has seen a significant increase in gold OA publications, ranking 27th globally, 10th in Asia, and first in Southeast Asi...

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Published in:Malaysian Journal of Library and Information Science
Main Author: Abidin A.; Fairuzy N.; Rahman S.S.A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Computer Science and Information Technology 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85216534021&doi=10.22452%2fmjlis.vol29no3.3&partnerID=40&md5=4e257f788be04d6f97105ca313050061
id 2-s2.0-85216534021
spelling 2-s2.0-85216534021
Abidin A.; Fairuzy N.; Rahman S.S.A.
Mapping Malaysia’s contribution to Gold Open Access: Growth patterns, disparities, and policy implications
2024
Malaysian Journal of Library and Information Science
29
3
10.22452/mjlis.vol29no3.3
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85216534021&doi=10.22452%2fmjlis.vol29no3.3&partnerID=40&md5=4e257f788be04d6f97105ca313050061
This study examines the growth of Gold Open Access (OA) research output in Malaysia through a bibliometric analysis using Web of Science (WoS) data. Over the past decade, Malaysia has seen a significant increase in gold OA publications, ranking 27th globally, 10th in Asia, and first in Southeast Asia. The analysis reveals that Science & Technology and Health Sciences dominate the gold OA landscape, while Arts & Humanities and Social Sciences remain underrepresented. Malaysian researchers predominantly publish their gold OA articles in international journals, with Switzerland-based publishers being particularly prominent. A notable finding is the impact of government restrictions on using research funds for publications with three specific publishers - MDPI, Hindawi, and Frontiers. In 2023, MDPI experienced a 25.4 percent decline in publications by Malaysian researchers, reflecting a shift in publication patterns due to these restrictions. Despite the overall growth, the study highlights a mismatch between the quantity of gold OA publications and their citation impact, raising questions about the broader influence of Malaysian gold OA research. These findings underscore the need for strategies to manage and promote gold OA publishing effectively while addressing the challenges posed by policy restrictions. The insights offer valuable guidance for researchers and policymakers to optimize the benefits of gold OA publishing in Malaysia. © (2024), (Faculty of Computer Science and Information Technology). All rights reserved.
Faculty of Computer Science and Information Technology
13946234
English
Article

author Abidin A.; Fairuzy N.; Rahman S.S.A.
spellingShingle Abidin A.; Fairuzy N.; Rahman S.S.A.
Mapping Malaysia’s contribution to Gold Open Access: Growth patterns, disparities, and policy implications
author_facet Abidin A.; Fairuzy N.; Rahman S.S.A.
author_sort Abidin A.; Fairuzy N.; Rahman S.S.A.
title Mapping Malaysia’s contribution to Gold Open Access: Growth patterns, disparities, and policy implications
title_short Mapping Malaysia’s contribution to Gold Open Access: Growth patterns, disparities, and policy implications
title_full Mapping Malaysia’s contribution to Gold Open Access: Growth patterns, disparities, and policy implications
title_fullStr Mapping Malaysia’s contribution to Gold Open Access: Growth patterns, disparities, and policy implications
title_full_unstemmed Mapping Malaysia’s contribution to Gold Open Access: Growth patterns, disparities, and policy implications
title_sort Mapping Malaysia’s contribution to Gold Open Access: Growth patterns, disparities, and policy implications
publishDate 2024
container_title Malaysian Journal of Library and Information Science
container_volume 29
container_issue 3
doi_str_mv 10.22452/mjlis.vol29no3.3
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85216534021&doi=10.22452%2fmjlis.vol29no3.3&partnerID=40&md5=4e257f788be04d6f97105ca313050061
description This study examines the growth of Gold Open Access (OA) research output in Malaysia through a bibliometric analysis using Web of Science (WoS) data. Over the past decade, Malaysia has seen a significant increase in gold OA publications, ranking 27th globally, 10th in Asia, and first in Southeast Asia. The analysis reveals that Science & Technology and Health Sciences dominate the gold OA landscape, while Arts & Humanities and Social Sciences remain underrepresented. Malaysian researchers predominantly publish their gold OA articles in international journals, with Switzerland-based publishers being particularly prominent. A notable finding is the impact of government restrictions on using research funds for publications with three specific publishers - MDPI, Hindawi, and Frontiers. In 2023, MDPI experienced a 25.4 percent decline in publications by Malaysian researchers, reflecting a shift in publication patterns due to these restrictions. Despite the overall growth, the study highlights a mismatch between the quantity of gold OA publications and their citation impact, raising questions about the broader influence of Malaysian gold OA research. These findings underscore the need for strategies to manage and promote gold OA publishing effectively while addressing the challenges posed by policy restrictions. The insights offer valuable guidance for researchers and policymakers to optimize the benefits of gold OA publishing in Malaysia. © (2024), (Faculty of Computer Science and Information Technology). All rights reserved.
publisher Faculty of Computer Science and Information Technology
issn 13946234
language English
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