In order to improve the h-index in terms of its accuracy and sensitivity to the form of the citation distribution, we propose the new bibliometric index . The basic idea is to define, for any author with a given number of citations, an “ideal” citation distribution which represents a benchmark in terms of number of papers and number of citations per publication, and to obtain an index which increases its value when the real citation distribution approaches its ideal form. The method is very general because the ideal distribution can be defined differently according to the main objective of the index. In this paper we propose to define it by a “squared-form” distribution: this is consistent with many popular bibliometric indices, which reach...
Many discussions have enlarged the literature in Bibliometrics since the Hirsch proposal, the so cal...
The popular h-index used to measure scientific output can be described in terms of a pool of evaluat...
The h-index is a metric that uses both the number of an author’s publications along with the number ...
In order to improve the h-index in terms of its accuracy and sensitivity to the form of the citation...
In order to improve the h-index in terms of its accuracy and sensitivity to the form of the citation...
We propose a new index, the j-index, which is defined for an author as the sum of the square roots o...
We propose the χ-index as a bibliometric indicator that generalises the h-index. While the h-index i...
An individual’s h-index corresponds to the number h of his/her papers that each has at least h citat...
An individual’s h-index corresponds to the number h of his/her papers that each has at least h citat...
International audienceThe h-index is an index recently proposed by Hirsch (2005) to measure scientif...
The h-index is a mainstream bibliometric indicator, since it is widely used in academia, research ma...
We propose a new index, the j-index, which is defined for an author as the sum of the square roots o...
Despite the drawbacks already pointed out and the wide set of variants suggested to overcome some of...
Axiomatic characterisation of a bibliometric index provides insight into the properties that the in...
We use Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) to derive a unifying measure of comparison of scientists b...
Many discussions have enlarged the literature in Bibliometrics since the Hirsch proposal, the so cal...
The popular h-index used to measure scientific output can be described in terms of a pool of evaluat...
The h-index is a metric that uses both the number of an author’s publications along with the number ...
In order to improve the h-index in terms of its accuracy and sensitivity to the form of the citation...
In order to improve the h-index in terms of its accuracy and sensitivity to the form of the citation...
We propose a new index, the j-index, which is defined for an author as the sum of the square roots o...
We propose the χ-index as a bibliometric indicator that generalises the h-index. While the h-index i...
An individual’s h-index corresponds to the number h of his/her papers that each has at least h citat...
An individual’s h-index corresponds to the number h of his/her papers that each has at least h citat...
International audienceThe h-index is an index recently proposed by Hirsch (2005) to measure scientif...
The h-index is a mainstream bibliometric indicator, since it is widely used in academia, research ma...
We propose a new index, the j-index, which is defined for an author as the sum of the square roots o...
Despite the drawbacks already pointed out and the wide set of variants suggested to overcome some of...
Axiomatic characterisation of a bibliometric index provides insight into the properties that the in...
We use Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) to derive a unifying measure of comparison of scientists b...
Many discussions have enlarged the literature in Bibliometrics since the Hirsch proposal, the so cal...
The popular h-index used to measure scientific output can be described in terms of a pool of evaluat...
The h-index is a metric that uses both the number of an author’s publications along with the number ...