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2025-Modernising the ASJC System - 18 Downloads

Modernising the Academic Subjects Journal Classification (ASJC) System – A Discussion Paper

David Rew, MA MB MChir (Cambridge) FRCS (London)
Honorary Consultant Surgeon to the Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, UK
And to the Clinical Informatics Research Unit.

Subject Chair for Medicine to the SCOPUS Content Selection Advisory Board,  Elsevier BV, The Netherlands, 2009 to the Present

Open source Preprint for publication on the ePrint Server, University of Southampton

28th February 2025

Key words

Academic subject classification; All Sciences Journal Classification;  Scopus; Web of Science;  Medline; Ulrich’s Periodicals; Article level classification

Abstract

Background: The classification of documents, articles and journals provides structure, logic and integrity to a large and proliferating ecosystem of academic and research information.  Reliable classification systems are of value to many users, including publishers, institutions and authors who are looking for the most appropriate repository for their publishable work.

The All Sciences Journal Classification System (ASJC) is the best known of such systems. It was developed more than 20 years ago by a team at Elsevier Science. The academic corpus now includes many subject areas outwith the original design of the ASJC, as in the Arts and Humanities. The Internet has also fostered a substantial growth of non-traditional publishers and publication methods, and a proliferation of multi-subject and multidisciplinary journals.

Methods: 15 years of observation of the use of the ASJC in the quality assurance of journals has provided subjective evidence of the limitations of the original ASJ Classification. The SCOPUS database was therefore used to analyse the distribution of journals across the present classification, and to match a machine generated, article-based classification against the ASJC, based upon the titles and abstracts.

Results: The analyses confirmed the very uneven distribution of journals by subject across the ASJC, and the lack of correlation between the calculated article-based classification and the allocation of journals using the existing subject based classification. Multidisciplinary journals pose particular challenges to journal classification systems.

Conclusions: The arguments for the modernisation of the ASJC are balanced against the development and introduction of article and author based classification systems. There is an increasing role for machine based and AI assisted tools to automate human expert based methods of classification. However, so long as journals remain a key element in knowledge dissemination, there is a strong case to be made for a modernised and regularly updated ASJC based all sources classification system for academic publications.