The degree to which a scholar’s work is cited by others has been regarded as an indicator of its scientific impact relative to other researchers in the web of scholarly communications. Likewise, various metrics based on citation counts have been developed to evaluate the impact of scholarly journals. Recently there has emerged a new research trend aimed at developing impact metrics that consider not only “the raw number of citations received by a scientific agent, but also the importance or influence of the actors who issue those citations.” These new metrics represent scientific impact as a function not of just the quality of citations received but of a combination of the quality and the quantity. For example, the SCImago Journal Rank (SJR...
Google Scholar Metrics' launch in April 2012, a new bibliometric tool for the evaluation of scientif...
Rankings of scholarly journals based on citation data are often met with scepticism by the scientifi...
Research outputs are growing in number and frequency, assisted by a greater number of publication me...
The degree to which a scholar’s work is cited by others has been regarded as an indicator of its sci...
This paper proposes an indicator of journals' scientific prestige, the SJR indicator, for ranking sc...
Quantifying scholarly output via traditional citation metrics is the time-honored method to gauge ac...
The launching of Scopus and Google Scholar, and methodological developments in Social Network Analys...
The unprecedented challenges of “information overload” in the digital age have prompted academic ins...
A new size-independent indicator of scientific journal prestige, the SJR2 indicator, is proposed. Th...
ABSTRACT The application of currently available sophisticated algorithms of citation analysis allows...
Standard approaches to measurement of the ‘impact’ of academic journals, or even sometimes of indivi...
The citations count is flawed but it still the most common way of measuring the academic impact used...
Publication metrics indicate the visibility and reach of a research publication. The metrics can be ...
Scholarly outputs are growing in number and frequency, driving the requirement to research new early...
The number of citations has been used for measuring the significance of a paper. Moreover, we have t...
Google Scholar Metrics' launch in April 2012, a new bibliometric tool for the evaluation of scientif...
Rankings of scholarly journals based on citation data are often met with scepticism by the scientifi...
Research outputs are growing in number and frequency, assisted by a greater number of publication me...
The degree to which a scholar’s work is cited by others has been regarded as an indicator of its sci...
This paper proposes an indicator of journals' scientific prestige, the SJR indicator, for ranking sc...
Quantifying scholarly output via traditional citation metrics is the time-honored method to gauge ac...
The launching of Scopus and Google Scholar, and methodological developments in Social Network Analys...
The unprecedented challenges of “information overload” in the digital age have prompted academic ins...
A new size-independent indicator of scientific journal prestige, the SJR2 indicator, is proposed. Th...
ABSTRACT The application of currently available sophisticated algorithms of citation analysis allows...
Standard approaches to measurement of the ‘impact’ of academic journals, or even sometimes of indivi...
The citations count is flawed but it still the most common way of measuring the academic impact used...
Publication metrics indicate the visibility and reach of a research publication. The metrics can be ...
Scholarly outputs are growing in number and frequency, driving the requirement to research new early...
The number of citations has been used for measuring the significance of a paper. Moreover, we have t...
Google Scholar Metrics' launch in April 2012, a new bibliometric tool for the evaluation of scientif...
Rankings of scholarly journals based on citation data are often met with scepticism by the scientifi...
Research outputs are growing in number and frequency, assisted by a greater number of publication me...