Researchers contribute to the frontiers of knowledge by establishing facts and reaching new conclusions through systematic investigations, and by subsequently publishing the outcomes of their research findings in the form of research papers. These research publications are indicative of researchers' scientific impact. Different bibliometric indices have been proposed to measure the impact or productivity of a researcher. These indices include publication count, citation count, number of coauthors, h-index, etc. The h-index, since its inception, has been ranked as the foremost impact indicator by many studies. However, as a consequence of the various short comings identified in h-index, some variants of h-index have been proposed. For instan...
Background Many author indices exist to gauge academic productivity. Several of these indices are c...
Background Many author indices exist to gauge academic productivity. Several of these indices are c...
Scholarly impact is studied frequently and used to make consequential decisions (e.g., hiring, tenur...
Over the last decade, the demand to evaluate the impact of any given research study, the credentials...
Over the last decade, the demand to evaluate the impact of any given research study, the credentials...
Various new performance evaluation indices for impact have been proposed and studied in various cont...
Although the identification of key-performance measures for evaluating scientists is a well-recogniz...
We provide a comprehensive and critical review of the h-index and its most important modifications p...
Abstract: h-index retrieved by citation indexes (Scopus, Google scholar, and Web of Science) is used...
The success of research projects funded by various agencies can be evaluated by studying the researc...
Abstract The assessment of individual researchers using bibliometric indicators is more complex than...
The most infamous author-level performance indicator in academia is the h-index. Hirsch (2005) creat...
We apply a new bibliometric measure, the h-index (Hirsch, 2005), to the literature of information sc...
I propose the Relative h-index of a scientist, which is based on his or her Hirsch's h-index divided...
Background Many author indices exist to gauge academic productivity. Several of these indices are c...
Background Many author indices exist to gauge academic productivity. Several of these indices are c...
Background Many author indices exist to gauge academic productivity. Several of these indices are c...
Scholarly impact is studied frequently and used to make consequential decisions (e.g., hiring, tenur...
Over the last decade, the demand to evaluate the impact of any given research study, the credentials...
Over the last decade, the demand to evaluate the impact of any given research study, the credentials...
Various new performance evaluation indices for impact have been proposed and studied in various cont...
Although the identification of key-performance measures for evaluating scientists is a well-recogniz...
We provide a comprehensive and critical review of the h-index and its most important modifications p...
Abstract: h-index retrieved by citation indexes (Scopus, Google scholar, and Web of Science) is used...
The success of research projects funded by various agencies can be evaluated by studying the researc...
Abstract The assessment of individual researchers using bibliometric indicators is more complex than...
The most infamous author-level performance indicator in academia is the h-index. Hirsch (2005) creat...
We apply a new bibliometric measure, the h-index (Hirsch, 2005), to the literature of information sc...
I propose the Relative h-index of a scientist, which is based on his or her Hirsch's h-index divided...
Background Many author indices exist to gauge academic productivity. Several of these indices are c...
Background Many author indices exist to gauge academic productivity. Several of these indices are c...
Background Many author indices exist to gauge academic productivity. Several of these indices are c...
Scholarly impact is studied frequently and used to make consequential decisions (e.g., hiring, tenur...