We apply a new bibliometric measure, the h-index (Hirsch, 2005), to the literature of information science. Faculty rankings based on raw citation counts are compared with those based on h-counts. There is a strong positive correlation between the two sets of rankings. We show how the h-index can be used to express the broad impact of a scholarâ s research output over time in more nuanced fashion than straight citation counts
Abstract Citation numbers and other quantities derived from bibliographic databases are becoming sta...
International audienceThe h-index is an index recently proposed by Hirsch (2005) to measure scientif...
The growing need for quantification of research performance for promotion and tenure and grant fundi...
We apply a new bibliometric measure, the h-index (Hirsch, 2005), to the literature of information sc...
What is the value of a scientist and its impact upon the scientific thinking? How can we measure the...
What is the value of a scientist and its impact upon the scientific thinking? How can we measure the...
The ability to design an instrument sufficiently versatile to effectively gauge the impact of a scie...
As academia increasingly turns to bibliometric tools to assess research impact, the question of whic...
The impact of individual scientists is commonly quantified using citation-based measures. The most c...
As academia increasingly turns to bibliometric tools to assess research impact, the question of whic...
Researchers contribute to the frontiers of knowledge by establishing facts and reaching new conclusi...
the new index enjoys many good properties. In the discrete setting some small deviations from the id...
As academia increasingly turns to bibliometric tools to assess research impact, the question of whic...
Scholarly impact is studied frequently and used to make consequential decisions (e.g., hiring, tenur...
The h-index is a metric that uses both the number of an author’s publications along with the number ...
Abstract Citation numbers and other quantities derived from bibliographic databases are becoming sta...
International audienceThe h-index is an index recently proposed by Hirsch (2005) to measure scientif...
The growing need for quantification of research performance for promotion and tenure and grant fundi...
We apply a new bibliometric measure, the h-index (Hirsch, 2005), to the literature of information sc...
What is the value of a scientist and its impact upon the scientific thinking? How can we measure the...
What is the value of a scientist and its impact upon the scientific thinking? How can we measure the...
The ability to design an instrument sufficiently versatile to effectively gauge the impact of a scie...
As academia increasingly turns to bibliometric tools to assess research impact, the question of whic...
The impact of individual scientists is commonly quantified using citation-based measures. The most c...
As academia increasingly turns to bibliometric tools to assess research impact, the question of whic...
Researchers contribute to the frontiers of knowledge by establishing facts and reaching new conclusi...
the new index enjoys many good properties. In the discrete setting some small deviations from the id...
As academia increasingly turns to bibliometric tools to assess research impact, the question of whic...
Scholarly impact is studied frequently and used to make consequential decisions (e.g., hiring, tenur...
The h-index is a metric that uses both the number of an author’s publications along with the number ...
Abstract Citation numbers and other quantities derived from bibliographic databases are becoming sta...
International audienceThe h-index is an index recently proposed by Hirsch (2005) to measure scientif...
The growing need for quantification of research performance for promotion and tenure and grant fundi...