Using bibliometric data artificially generated through a model of citation dynamics calibrated on empirical data, we compare several indicators for the scientific impact of individual researchers. The use of such a controlled setup has the advantage of avoiding the biases present in real databases, and it allows us to assess which aspects of the model dynamics and which traits of individual researchers a particular indicator actually reflects. We find that the simple average citation count of the authored papers performs well in capturing the intrinsic scientific ability of researchers, regardless of the length of their career. On the other hand, when productivity complements ability in the evaluation process, the notorious h and g ...
Quantitative research evaluation requires measures that are transparent, relatively simple, and free...
Standard approaches to measurement of the ‘impact’ of academic journals, or even sometimes of indivi...
Quantitative research evaluation requires measures that are transparent, relatively simple, and free...
Using bibliometric data artificially generated through a model of citation dynamics calibrated on em...
Citation metrics are becoming pervasive in the quantitative evaluation of schol-ars, journals and in...
Recent science of science research shows that scientific impact measures for journals and individual...
An increasing demand for bibliometric assessment of individuals has led to a growth of new bibliomet...
Abstract Over the last four decades, bibliometric analysis for research assessment has moved from re...
This dataset contains citation-based impact indicators (a.k.a, "measures") for ~151M distinct DOIs t...
The relevance of various citation metrics used for parameterization of the research outputs of scien...
Abstract The assessment of individual researchers using bibliometric indicators is more complex than...
Citations in science are being studied from several perspectives. On the one hand, there are approac...
Citation metrics are statistical measures of scientific outputs that draw on citation indexes. They ...
Despite the drawbacks already pointed out and the wide set of variants suggested to overcome some of...
The degree to which a scholar’s work is cited by others has been regarded as an indicator of its sci...
Quantitative research evaluation requires measures that are transparent, relatively simple, and free...
Standard approaches to measurement of the ‘impact’ of academic journals, or even sometimes of indivi...
Quantitative research evaluation requires measures that are transparent, relatively simple, and free...
Using bibliometric data artificially generated through a model of citation dynamics calibrated on em...
Citation metrics are becoming pervasive in the quantitative evaluation of schol-ars, journals and in...
Recent science of science research shows that scientific impact measures for journals and individual...
An increasing demand for bibliometric assessment of individuals has led to a growth of new bibliomet...
Abstract Over the last four decades, bibliometric analysis for research assessment has moved from re...
This dataset contains citation-based impact indicators (a.k.a, "measures") for ~151M distinct DOIs t...
The relevance of various citation metrics used for parameterization of the research outputs of scien...
Abstract The assessment of individual researchers using bibliometric indicators is more complex than...
Citations in science are being studied from several perspectives. On the one hand, there are approac...
Citation metrics are statistical measures of scientific outputs that draw on citation indexes. They ...
Despite the drawbacks already pointed out and the wide set of variants suggested to overcome some of...
The degree to which a scholar’s work is cited by others has been regarded as an indicator of its sci...
Quantitative research evaluation requires measures that are transparent, relatively simple, and free...
Standard approaches to measurement of the ‘impact’ of academic journals, or even sometimes of indivi...
Quantitative research evaluation requires measures that are transparent, relatively simple, and free...