RT Journal Article T1 Are nationally oriented journals indexed in Scopus becoming more international? The effect of publication language and access modality A1 Moed, Henk A1 Moya-Anegon, Felix A1 Guerrero-Bote, Vicente A1 López Illescas, María Del Carmen AB An exploratory-descriptive analysis is presented of the national orientation of scientific-scholarly journals as reflected in the affiliations of publishing or citing authors. It calculates for journals covered in Scopus an Index of National Orientation (INO), and analyses the distribution of INO values across disciplines and countries, and the correlation between INO values and journal impact factors. The study did not find solid evidence that journal impact factors are good measures of journal internationality in terms of the geographical distribution of publishing or citing authors, as the relationship between a journal’s national orientation and its citation impact is found to be inverse U-shaped. In addition, journals publishing in English are not necessarily internationally oriented in terms of the affiliations of publishing or citing authors; in social sciences and humanities also USA has their nationally oriented literatures. The paper examines the extent to which nationally oriented journals entering Scopus in earlier years, have become in recent years more international. It is found that in the study set about 40 per cent of such journals does reveal traces of internationalization, while the use of English as publication language and an Open Access (OA) status are important determinants. PB Elsevier SN 1751-1577 YR 2019 FD 2019 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/99364 UL https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/99364 LA eng NO Moed, H F., Moya-Anegon, F, Guerrero-Bote, V, Lopez-Illescas, C. Are nationally oriented journals indexed in Scopus becoming more international? The effect of publication language and access modality. Journal of Informetrics. 2020 Feb 21;14(2):1751-77 DS Docta Complutense RD 10 abr 2025