Stevia rebaudiana: A Bibliometric Analysis from 1966-2019

Review Article

Stevia rebaudiana: A Bibliometric Analysis from 1966-2019

Saima Nasir, Jamila Ahmed*

Adv. life sci., vol. 8, no. 2, pp. 195-201, February 2021
*Corresponding Authors: Jamila Ahmed (Email: jamila.ahmed@aiou.edu.pk)
Authors' Affiliations

 ORIC, Allama Iqbal Open University, Islamabad – Pakistan
 [Date Received: 24/06/2020; Date Revised: 18/12/2020; Date Published: 25/02/2021]


Abstractaa download_button
Introduction
Methods
Discussion

Conclusion
References 


Abstract

This study has been carried out to analyze research papers published on Stevia rebaudiana during 1966-2019 using a bibliometric approach. The data is mined from the Web of Science Core Collection,  returning 1835 articles on the topic for analysis. The study documents most productive countries and authors delved into Stevia research. India appears to be the most productive country, followed by USA. The top-cited articles, top-organizations and funding agencies, and journals with most publications on subject are also identified. The analysis shows an increasing trend for research on Stevia during recent years with an Annual Percentage Growth Rate of 1.29 and the number jumped from only 03 publications in 1966-1971 to 1000 in 2014-2019. Pakistan has a comparable global share of 2.84% on Stevia research but further attention on research is needed in this field apprehending the commercial and health potential of this plant and considering the status of Pakistan as an agrarian country.

Keywords: Stevia rebaudiana; Economic potential; Research productivity; Bibliometric

Introduction6th button-01


Researchers have conducted bibliometric studies on a number of plants having medicinal and economic potential such as Curcuma longa [1], Ocimum sanctum [2], Glycyrrhiza glabra [3], Nigella sativa [4], Aloe vera [5] and Azadirachta indica [6]. However, no particular studies on bibliometric analysis of Stevia research are available, despite the significance attached to this plant as a no calorie sweetener grown commercially in many parts of the world and also for its potential as beneficial medication as remedy for many chronic diseases e.g Arterial hypertension [7]

Stevia (Stevia rebaudiana Bertoni, Asteraceae) is a native plant of Paraguay and is a small perennial plant [8]. It is widely grown commercially and used in many parts of the world including Central America, Paraguay, Brazil, Japan, Korea, Thailand, India and China as sweetener [9-11]. This plant has a potential future and has been proven to be better than most of other high-potency sweeteners in its sensory and functional properties. Stevia has become a major sugar alternate globally in growing food market [12]. In many countries, Stevia and its metabolites have been making market as substitutes for sugar  in foods, beverages and medicines [12-15]. It is a point of concern that Stevia is not reportedly grown commercially in Pakistan despite of all its importance.

A number of studies have reported various health benefits of Stevia as therapeutic agent and an efficient medication for curing chronic diseases [16]. Stevia leaves are used broadly as antiviral, antimicrobial and antifungal agents [17-19]. The medical applications of Stevia are reported to be effective as anti-hypertensive and several studies are documented in a review paper [20]. Stevia is also reported as having properties as anti-hyperglycemic [21], hepatoprotective [22, 23], anti-inflammatory, anti-diarrheal and diuretic [10, 24, 25], and anti-tumor [19]. Stevia is also known to be effective against human rotavirus activities, is anti-HIV and possess immunomodulatory effects [16, 26, 27].

A report on Stevia by Expert Market Research (EMR) forecasted that the global stevia market will attain a production value of nearly USD 520.32 million in 2020 with a further growth at a CAGR of 8.4%  during the forecast period (2021-2026). It is projected in the report that the global production value of stevia will expectedly reach USD 844.20 million by 2026 [28]. Europe is stipulated to account for more than half of the revenue shares in the stevia market by the end of 2029. The largest market for Stevia is Asia Pacific. Collaborations between researchers and relevant stakeholders in broad research communities are explored through bibliometric studies. Realizing the colossal benefits of Stevia, rigorous efforts toward improving knowledge, management, and commercialization of Stevia research is necessitated. Therefore, it is an imperative need to document status of research on Stevia. It will also facilitate planning and policy making. Thus, the aim of the present study was bibliometric analysis of the global scientific production, and help researchers understand the characteristics of research done on Stevia and reference an important and interesting field of research in future to set direction and quantum of research in this regard especially for agrarian economies to reap full benefits of the commercialization potential of this plant. 

Methods6th button-01


Literature Search strategy and selection criteria

A comprehensive search was conducted on Web of Science, Core Collection, hosted by Clarivate Analytics on January 15, 2020. The search was done using the keywords “Stevia” or “Stevia rebaudiana”. The search was limited to time period (1966-2019), and documents types (article, review, meeting abstract, letter, proceedings paper, note and editorial material). Articles were evaluated for several attributes including authorship, citation characteristics including cites per document, total times cited, , most frequently cited articles, year of research publication, the country of origin of the article, name of journal, and document type of the article. Articles were downloaded in the BibTeX file format. The retrieved data was analyzed for bibliometric indicators using Rstudio v.3.6.2 software with bibliometrix R-package [29]. Data were imported into RStudio and converted to a bibliographic data frame and normalized for duplicate filing.

Discussion6th button-01


The present study appraised the global research on Stevia rebaudiana Bertoni starting from the first available paper in 1966 and stretched over fifty-four-year period till 2019, returning 1835 papers in the field from the Web of Science.

Characteristics of Retrieved Publications

The distribution of document types identified by Web of Science was analyzed. The publications were identified into 09 document types during the study period. Most of the bibliometric studies indicate that research articles are the most frequently employed document types, while English as the most used language [30, 31, 32]. Our study also come across research articles (1,498) as the most frequent document type accounting for 81.64% of all publications, followed by proceedings papers (96; 5.23%), meeting abstracts (90; 4.91%) and reviews (87; 4.74%). The remaining document types have less significance as also in other studies. Papers were published in 13 different languages of which 93.46% of all these articles were published in English. Spanish is the second most used language by Stevia researchers for communicating their findings (2.56%) although this share is quite low in comparison to English. Language wise share of published article is given in Figure 1. The top 10 Web of Science categories are presented in Table 1.  Food Science Technology was the leading category (n=488 records), followed by Plant Sciences (n=372 records), and Biochemistry Molecular Biology (n=191).

Annual distribution of publications and citations

The Annual Percentage Growth Rate of Stevia publications is 1.29. The total number of publications on Stevia did not go beyond single digits per year over first one and half decades (1966-1983) with most of the years bearing no output on Stevia. However, a stead-fast increase in publications was observed over subsequent years. For further analysis the data is divided into 09 cohorts of six years each. As shown in Figure 2, the retrieved data indicate an exponential growth in the published articles over years, but the focus shifted to research on Stevia in the last decade and the number of researches showed an increase from just 6.87% in 2002-2007 to 23.62% in 2008-2013. As compared to this 23.62%, the number of publications almost doubled to 54.56% in the last cohort. This trend is like several bibliometric studies on various plants of medicinal importance [35, 6].  This may be attributed to growing awareness about health as well as on exploration of research having an economic potential.

The retrieved documents were published in 736 peer-reviewed journals. These publications were cited 25,118 times, with average citations per item 13.7 times. The overall h-index was 67. The average total citations of articles published on Stevia oscillated over the years and peaked in the cohort 2002-2007 (average = 37.94). Generally, an inverse relationship was observed in the average total number of citations per year, for 2014-2019 the average was 5.74 (Figure 2).

Highly cited articles

The top 10 highly cited articles are shown in Table 2. The article by Geuns JM., entitled “Stevioside”, achieved the highest number of citations (n = 307). The article discussed in detail literature on Stevia and occurrence, biosynthetic pathway and toxicological aspects of its natural sweeteners. Of the top 10 highly cited articles, the topics ranged from natural sweet molecules and health benefits of Stevia.

Distribution of Authors and Author Collaborations

Analysis of the data showed that a total of 5347 researchers have played a role in the publication of 1835 articles. 110 single-authored documents were contributed by 87 researchers. 5260 researchers contributed multi-authored documents, with an average of 4.44 co-authors per document. Collaboration Index is calculated as 3.05. The authorship pattern is presented in Table 3. The ratio of the fraction of multi-authored articles in which a researcher appears as the first author was calculated to find the Dominance Factor. Our study revealed that maximum articles were contributed by multi- authors. Chaturvedula, VSP has the highest dominance factor (0.632) followed by Roman, LU (0.588). Our study, indicative of the high occurrence of multiple authorships, is consistent with findings of other bibliometric studies [33-35].

Amongst researchers “Jan M. C. Geuns” is considered the most active in the field, by contribution of 34 articles to global literature. “Pedro Joseph Nathan” is in second place, with 32 articles while “Indra Prakash” held third place with 28 articles. Among the most relevant researchers, Pakistani researcher Ahmad Nisar, contributed 17 articles in the field, and ranked sixth in global Stevia contribution. Details are presented in Table 4. There is no refute on research productivity as an asset of a researcher but more important than this is the impact of the research that is reflected by the number of citations accumulated.

Among such measures of the productivity and impact of a researcher, h-index and g-index are most important that are designed to indicate the cumulative effect of research output, and the number of citations. As shown in Table 4, “Jan M. C. Geuns” not only contributed the highest number of research articles on Stevia but also these articles have highest h-index and g-index amongst all Stevia researchers. “Osamu Tanaka" with an H-index of 14 follows and is ranked second.

Journals

A list of top 10 journals in the field of Stevia research is shown in Table 5. The top 10 journals included 16% of the total number of publications (n = 297, 16.19%). "Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry" is the journal with the highest h-index (=20) in this list while Phytochemistry has the highest g-index (=36) showing most cumulative citations. "Food Chemistry" has the highest impact factor (IF= 5.399) as per latest Journal Citation Report, followed by “Journal of Natural Products” and “Industrial Crops and Products " come next with impact factors 4.257 and 4.191 respectively.

Geographical Distribution of Stevia Studies

Most of the published research on Stevia is from Indian researchers (10.18%). The top 20 countries in terms of research output in the field of Stevia research are shown in Figure 3. As it is clear from Figure 3, in terms of geographical distribution, India is ahead of all the other countries. This is not in agreement with most of other bibliometric studies in different fields that confirm USA as the global research leader regarding the quality and quantity of published publications [36, 37]. Our data revealed that India has not only contributed the highest number of publications but is the country that has added maximum single country publications (ratio of Single country publications: Multiple country publications= 0.0539). Figure 4 presents the comparison of single country publications to multiple country publications based on the share of the corresponding author. For example, the total number of papers from India is 380. The corresponding authors for 204 papers are from India either in multiple country or single country publications (Single country publications = 193;  Multiple country publications= 11).

Funding Sources

Table 6 shows information about top funding agencies in Stevia research. Highest number of studies in the said field were funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (n=51), National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) (n=46) and CAPES, Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (n=32) both from Brazil. India has also provided funding for Stevia research through different sources resulting in a considerable share in global publications.

Co-occurrence of keywords

The density visualization map of co-occurrence of all keywords is given in Figure 5. The density of a term reflects the number of related keywords in various documents in which both were found. The distance between two terms offers an approximate indication of the relatedness of the terms. The relatedness of terms was determined based on co-occurrences. The minimum number of occurrences of a keyword was 10. Of the total 6179 keywords, only 231 keywords meet the threshold. The most frequent keyword was “stevioside” with 473 occurrences and a total link strength of 2349, followed by “Stevia rebaudiana” (occurrences=346, total link strength=1653), and “stevia” (occurrences=291, total link strength=1151). The word art of Stevia was created based on keywords in top 100 publications.

Bibliometric visualizations

Maximum number of countries per document was set at 25. Minimum number of documents per country was set at 10. Of the 92 countries, 38 meet the thresholds. Number of countries selected for visualization was 25. Figure 6 shows that USA was the leading county (documents=240, citations=3422, total link strength=85), followed by Spain (documents=76, citations=1006, total link strength=47), and Brazil (documents=147, citations=2041, total link strength=35). Pakistan has total link strength of 13 with 47 documents and 374 citations. The present bibliometric study presents an in-depth review of global research on Stevia showing greater research output from countries India, USA, Brazil, Mexico and Iran. The publication trend on Stevia research kept increasing in a linear manner and is reflective of the potential growth of Stevia research in the future. The findings confirm that the literature on Stevia plant is of interdisciplinary nature. There is a focus in research on identifying active components of Stevia for various purposes, especially in Food Science Technology, Plant Sciences and Biochemistry Molecular Biology. Maximum research output is the result of team effort that has been increasing over time. A limited trend of collaboration with developing countries exhibited by technologically advanced and developed countries and low productivity in developing countries in Stevia research is evident from the results. Pakistan has a good global share in literature on Stevia but keeping in consideration the economic potential of this crop, much more research is expected. We expect that future studies should continue to explore maximum medicinal potential of Stevia and develop new ways of its commercial cultivation as an alternate sugar crop. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Conclusions 6th button-01


The analysis shows an increasing trend for research on Stevia during recent years with an Annual Percentage Growth Rate of 1.29 and the number jumped from only 03 publications in 1966-1971 to 1000 in 2014-2019. Pakistan has a comparable global share of 2.84% on Stevia research but further attention on research is needed in this field apprehending the commercial and health potential of this plant and considering the status of Pakistan as an agrarian country.

Authors' Contribution


Both authors have equally contributed to the manuscript. Saima Nasir analyzed the data, wrote and edited the manuscript. Jamila Ahmad retrieved and analyzed data from Web of Science and formatted the manuscript.

Conflict of interest


The authors certify that they have no conflict of interest to declare in the subject matter or materials discussed in this manuscript.

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