Springer Nature continues to advance sharing
Over 3.25 million articles accessed in SharedIt’s first year
London | Berlin, 27 November 2017
Articles have been successfully shared by authors, subscribers and media outlets over 3.25 million times during the first year of SharedIt, Springer Nature’s free content sharing initiative.
SharedIt was launched in October 2016 and covers over 2,700 journals including all the Springer Nature-owned portfolio and over 1,000 co-owned and partner-owned journals. This industry-leading initiative enables authors and subscribers to post links to free-to-read versions of research articles anywhere, including social media platforms, repositories, websites, scholarly collaboration networks and via email.
Steven Inchcoombe, Chief Publishing Officer, Springer Nature, said: “For too long ‘sharing’ has been a difficult word in academic publishing. We believe we work at the behest of our authors and subscribers, and as the ability to share their work and collaborate around new research is critical to them, it needs to be critical to us as well. Our investment in SharedIt is testament to this. I am delighted therefore to see SharedIt embraced so strongly by our authors and our readers, and both across the globe and our portfolio. We are sharing these data now as part of a wider programme to encourage others to apply similar sharing approaches.”
The SharedIt data show:
- SharedIt links were used to read Springer Nature articles 3,276,125 times, by readers in over 200 markets and from almost 29,000 institutions.
- The majority of links used to access articles were those originally shared by subscribers to Springer Nature journals (1.24 million).
- Links shared by authors were accessed 1.15 million times and those included in news articles by media outlets 885,195 times.
- The United States leads the way in readers using SharedIt links, with over a third of those accessing links to read Springer Nature papers coming from the US.
Steven Inchcoombe continued: “Research needs to be as discoverable, accessible, understandable, and as shareable as possible. SharedIt was developed with exactly this purpose in mind, it delivers unique links to copies of the ‘version of record’ articles that will be updated for any post-publication changes and can be highlighted and annotated by those sharing the links. All of this underlines our commitment to enabling new research findings to be read and used by those who support and enable research, by those who help these findings to be applied for the benefit of all, as well as the interested wider public. We are excited by the potential these numbers suggest and are keen to explore adding more of the journals of our society partners to the initiative to enable even greater sharing of the research that we publish.”
Most highly shared accessed papers
The papers most accessed using SharedIt links were:
- The artificial intelligence paper ‘Hybrid computing using a neural network with dynamic external memory’, published in Nature, was the most popular and accessed 43,869 times.
- The second most popular paper was also an artificial intelligence paper published in Nature, ‘Mastering the game of Go without human knowledge’, reaching 42,286 accesses.
- In third, with 25,402 accesses, was a Nature Medicine paper ‘A chronic low dose of Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) restores cognitive function in old mice’.
Top ten most highly-accessed papers
Paper | Journal | Link | Number of accesses |
Hybrid computing using a neural network with dynamic external memory | Nature | http://rdcu.be/yGrW | 43,689 |
Mastering the game of Go without human knowledge | Nature | http://rdcu.be/yGiu | 42,286 |
A chronic low dose of Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) restores cognitive function in old mice | Nature Medicine | 25,402 | |
Large-scale physical activity data reveal worldwide activity inequality | Nature | 23,667 | |
Dermatologist-level classification of skin cancer with deep neural networks | Nature | 22,427 | |
Genome-wide association meta-analysis of 78,308 individuals identifies new loci and genes influencing human intelligence | Nature Genetics | 22,057 | |
CRISPR–Cas encoding of a digital movie into the genomes of a population of living bacteria | Nature | 18,900 | |
New fossils from Jebel Irhoud, Morocco and the pan-African origin of Homo sapiens | Nature | 18,439 | |
Emission budgets and pathways consistent with limiting warming to 1.5 °C | Nature Geoscience | 17,323 | |
Metformin alters the gut microbiome of individuals with treatment-naive type 2 diabetes, contributing to the therapeutic effects of the drug | Nature Medicine | 16,924 |
Most prolific users by country
Readers in the United States used the most SharedIt links generated by subscribers in the first year, totalling 513,370 clicks, followed by the UK, Germany, Brazil and Canada.
In the case of links shared by authors, readers in the US again led the way clicking on 393,956 links, followed by Germany, the UK, India and China. Other countries also showing strong engagement with the SharedIt initiative included France, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Spain and Australia.
Top ten users of subscriber links | Top ten users of author links |
1. United States | 1. United States |
2. United Kingdom | 2. Germany |
3. Germany | 3. United Kingdom |
4. Brazil | 4. India |
5. Canada | 5. China |
6. Italy | 6. Canada |
7. France | 7. Brazil |
8. Mexico | 8. Australia |
9. Japan | 9. Italy |
10. Spain | 10. Japan |
For more information about SharedIt, please visit http://www.springernature.com/sharedit.
Notes for editors:
Mark Staniland
Senior Communications Manager, Nature Research, Springer Nature
+44 (0)207 014 6630
mark.staniland@nature.com
Clicks from Nature Research author shares | Clicks from Nature Research subscriber shares | Clicks from Nature Research media shares | Clicks from Springer author shares | Clicks from Springer subscriber shares | Clicks from Springer media shares |
297,021 | 955,519 | 883,849 | 853,807 | 284,583 | 1,346 |
The tools that enable the SharedIt functionality are provided by ReadCube, whose industry-leading functionality enables sharers to make available final published versions of research papers in the streaming Enhanced PDF format. In addition to the full text of the articles, the Enhanced PDF provides hyperlinked in-line citations and figures, annotation capabilities, one-click access to supplemental content and figures and advanced article metrics.
Springer Nature advances discovery by publishing robust and insightful research, supporting the development of new areas of knowledge and making ideas and information accessible around the world. Key to this is our ability to provide the best possible service to the whole research community: helping authors to share their discoveries; enabling researchers to find, access and understand the work of others; supporting librarians and institutions with innovations in technology and data; providing quality publishing support to societies; and championing the issues that matter – standing up for science, leading the way on open access and being powerful advocates for the highest quality and ethical standards in research. As a research publisher, Springer Nature is home to trusted brands including Springer, Nature Research, BMC, Palgrave Macmillan and Scientific American. For more information, please visit springernature.com and @SpringerNature.
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