Preprint abstracts in times of crisis: A comparative study with the pre-pandemic period

2021 
The urgency to respond to the COVID-19 outbreak has driven an unprecedented surge in preprints that aim to speed up knowledge dissemination as they are available much sooner than peer-reviewed publications In this study we consider abstracts of research articles and preprints as main entry points that draw attention to the most important information of the document and that try to entice us to read the whole article In this paper, we try to capture and examine shifts in scientific abstract writing produced at the very beginning of the pandemic We made a comparative study of abstracts in terms of their informativeness associated with preprints issued in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and those produced in 2019, the closest pre-pandemic period Our results clearly differ from one preprint server to another and show that there are community-centered habits as regards writing and reporting results The preprints issued from the arXiv, ChemRxiv and Research Square servers tend to have more informative (generous) abstracts than the ones submitted to the other servers In four servers, the ratio of structured abstracts decreases with the pandemic © 2021 Copyright for this paper by its authors
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