Hikikomori: A perspective from bibliometric analysis

Author:

Cai Hong12ORCID,Sha Sha3,Zhang Qinge3,Si Tong Leong12,Liu Yu‐Fei12,Zheng Wan‐Ying12,Su Zhaohui4,Cheung Teris5,Ungvari Gabor S.67,Teo Alan R.89ORCID,Kato Takahiro A.10,Ng Chee H.11,Xiang Yu‐Tao12

Affiliation:

1. Unit of Psychiatry, Department of Public Health and Medicinal Administration, & Institute of Translational Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences University of Macau Macao China

2. Centre for Cognitive and Brain Sciences University of Macau Macao China

3. The National Clinical Research Center for Mental Disorders & Beijing Key Laboratory of Mental Disorders, Beijing Anding Hospital & the Advanced Innovation Center for Human Brain Protection Capital Medical University Beijing China

4. School of Public Health Southeast University Nanjing China

5. School of Nursing Hong Kong Polytechnic University Hong Kong China

6. University of Notre Dame Australia Fremantle Western Australia Australia

7. Division of Psychiatry, School of Medicine University of Western Australia/Graylands Hospital Perth Australia

8. Center to Improve Veteran Involvement in Care VA Portland Health Care System Portland Oregon USA

9. Department of Psychiatry Oregon Health & Science University Portland Oregon USA

10. Department of Neuropsychiatry, Graduate School of Medical Sciences Kyushu University Fukuoka Japan

11. Department of Psychiatry, The Melbourne Clinic and St Vincent's Hospital University of Melbourne Richmond Victoria Australia

Abstract

AimsHikikomori is a common phenomenon reported in Japan and many other countries. However, the broad trends of the research publications on hikikomori are unclear. Therefore, this study examined the patterns of research on hikikomori using bibliometric analysis.MethodsRelevant publications were searched in Web of Science. Bibliometric analyses were performed with CiteSpace, R and VOSviewer.ResultsIn total, 297 publications on hikikomori met the eligibility criteria. The International Journal of Social Psychiatry (IF = 10.461) published the most papers (K = 17, or 5.7%) on hikikomori. Takahiro A. Kato from Kyushu University (41; 13.8%; H‐index = 18) was the most influential author, while Takahiro A. Kato (total link strength [TLS]: 235), Alan R. Teo (TLS: 157), and Masaru Tateno (TLS: 153) separately had the strongest research collaboration with other researchers. Of all countries that published on hikikomori, Japan had the highest number of publications (K = 91). The keywords “United States” and “psychiatric diagnosis” received the most attention between 2013 and 2015, whereas “health” and “autism spectrum disorder” received the most attention in 2021 and 2022.ConclusionsPeer‐reviewed research publications on hikikomori are growing rapidly and the research trends in this field are also changing.

Funder

Universidade de Macau

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Neurology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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