National Differences in Dissemination and Use of Open Access Literature

(Article)

Open Access
Countries
Authors
Affiliations

Marc-André Simard

Université de Montréal

Gita Ghiasi

Université de Montréal

Philippe Mongeon

Dalhousie University

Vincent Larivière

Université de Montréal

Published

August 2022

Doi

Citation

Simard, M.-A., Ghiasi, G., Mongeon, P., & Larivière, V. (2022). National differences in dissemination and use of open access literature. PLOS ONE, 17(8), e0272730. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0272730

Abstract

Open Access (OA) dissemination has been gaining a lot of momentum over the last decade, thanks to the implementation of several OA policies by funders and institutions, as well as the development of several new platforms that facilitate the publication of OA content at low or no cost. Studies have shown that nearly half of the contemporary scientific literature could be available online for free. However, few studies have compared the use of OA literature across countries. This study aims to provide a global picture of OA adoption by countries, using two indicators: publications in OA and references made to articles in OA. We find that, on average, low-income countries are publishing and citing OA at the highest rate, while upper middle-income countries and higher-income countries publish and cite OA articles at below world-average rates. These results highlight national differences in OA uptake and suggest that more OA initiatives at the institutional, national, and international levels are needed to support wider adoption of open scholarship.

Key figures

Fig 1. Weighted z-score and normalized map of the number of OA publications by country. Red indicates that a country is above the world average, blue indicates it is below the world average. White represents the world average. Contains information from OpenStreetMap and OpenStreetMap Foundation, which is made available under the Open Database License. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0272730.g001