The h-index has quickly become the standard method by which medical schools judge the impact of medical researchers. Rob Horne, Keith Petrie, and Simon Wessely describe a cluster of potentially pathological behaviours associated with the index
Recent editorials and debates in the literature have highlighted the h-index measurement scale for r...
Introduction: The number of publications and how often these have been cited play a role in academic...
We apply a new bibliometric measure, the h-index (Hirsch, 2005), to the literature of information sc...
The most infamous author-level performance indicator in academia is the h-index. Hirsch (2005) creat...
Abstract Background: Disciplines differ in their authorship and citation practices, thus discipline-...
The h-index is an author-level metric that attempts to measure both the productivity and the citatio...
The h-index is a metric that uses both the number of an author’s publications along with the number ...
Aim To investigate the contribution of selected types of articles to h-indices of medical researcher...
The h-index is a mainstream bibliometric indicator, since it is widely used in academia, research ma...
The questions in this article were formulated by G. Buela-Casal, the answers were given by J.E. Hirs...
Being a researcher is a highly competitive profession. The paper examines how authorship, h-index of...
Three years ago a bibliometric index for the qualification of a person's scientific output was propo...
Over the last years the h-index has gained popularity as a measure for comparing the impact of scien...
Citation metrics have rapidly gained importance in today\u27s landscape and are being increasingly u...
Background: H-index is one of the main bibliometric indicators for evaluating researchers. It has be...
Recent editorials and debates in the literature have highlighted the h-index measurement scale for r...
Introduction: The number of publications and how often these have been cited play a role in academic...
We apply a new bibliometric measure, the h-index (Hirsch, 2005), to the literature of information sc...
The most infamous author-level performance indicator in academia is the h-index. Hirsch (2005) creat...
Abstract Background: Disciplines differ in their authorship and citation practices, thus discipline-...
The h-index is an author-level metric that attempts to measure both the productivity and the citatio...
The h-index is a metric that uses both the number of an author’s publications along with the number ...
Aim To investigate the contribution of selected types of articles to h-indices of medical researcher...
The h-index is a mainstream bibliometric indicator, since it is widely used in academia, research ma...
The questions in this article were formulated by G. Buela-Casal, the answers were given by J.E. Hirs...
Being a researcher is a highly competitive profession. The paper examines how authorship, h-index of...
Three years ago a bibliometric index for the qualification of a person's scientific output was propo...
Over the last years the h-index has gained popularity as a measure for comparing the impact of scien...
Citation metrics have rapidly gained importance in today\u27s landscape and are being increasingly u...
Background: H-index is one of the main bibliometric indicators for evaluating researchers. It has be...
Recent editorials and debates in the literature have highlighted the h-index measurement scale for r...
Introduction: The number of publications and how often these have been cited play a role in academic...
We apply a new bibliometric measure, the h-index (Hirsch, 2005), to the literature of information sc...