Research Metrics
Research Metrics is the quantitative analysis of scientific
and scholarly research outputs and their impacts.
 Research Metrics include a variety of measures and
statistical methods for assessing the quality and broader
impact of scientific and scholarly research, as well as to track
researcher impact
 Research Metrics measure impact and provide insight into
the influence of specific journal publications, individual
articles, and authors.
Research Metrics Measures
Journal Metrics, such as Impact Factor, helps track citation patterns
within journals and determine which journals are highly-cited.
Author Metrics measure the impact and productivity of a
researcher.
Article Metrics, or citation tracking, is used to determine if an
article, book, journal, or particular author has been cited by another
work.
Altmetrics help researchers measure their impact from papers, data
sets, websites, blog posts, and more. A collated record of all the on
line shares and views of your research
Journal Impact Factor
21 December 2022 3
Journal Impact Factor
Journal Impact Factor
• Also known as “Impact Factor – IF”
• Journal Citation Report of Thomson Reuters
[http://thomsonreuters.com/about/]
• Can be accessed by Web of Science Database.
21 December 2022 4
Journal Impact Factor
Eugene Garfield PhD
[16 Sep 1925 -26 Feb 2017)
• Chemistry, Lib Sciences & Structural Linguistics
• Alma mater:Columbia and Pensylvania University.
• Founder and Chairman Emeritus – Thomson
Reuters
Known for:
• Impact Factor
• Bibliometrics
• Scientometrics
• Science and citation index
21 December 2022 Journal Impact Factor 5
• A journal impact factor (JIF) is a measure of
how many citations an average article
receives over a given period.
• Bibliometrics is the use of statistical methods
to analyze books, articles and other
publications.
• The sub-field of bibliometrics which concerns
itself with the analysis of scientific
publications is called scientometrics
First mention of Impact Factor
Garfield recommends keeping track of who
cited the paper.
“In effect, the system would provide a complete
listing, for the publications covered, of all the
original articles that had referred to the article in
question.” … Such an “impact factor” may be
much more indicative than an absolute count of a
scientist's publications.”
Here impact factor refers to the impact of the
article.
Impact Factors for Journals
In the early 1960’s Irving H. Sher and Eugene
Garfield created the Journal Impact Factor to help
select journals for Science Citation Index (SCI).
They knew that a core group of highly cited large
journals needed to be covered in SCI, but they also
wanted to include the small, but important review
journals which would not be included if they relied
only on publication or citation counts.
Created the Journal Impact Factor
Impact Factor
The Impact Factor is calculated by dividing the number of
citations in the Journal Citation Report (JCR) in a
particular year by the total number of articles published in
the two previous years.
Impact Factor
12
Journal Impact Factor Calculation
13
Self-citations affect the evaluation of the journal
Most journals have self-citation
rates of less than or equal to 15%
Source: JCR Science Edition (2010)
o Excessive self-citation weakens the integrity of the journal’s Impact
Factor
o Journals with excessive self-citation may be suppressed from Journal
Citation Reports until the problem is corrected
85%
SNIP-Source Normalised Impact per Paper
• SNIP=
No.of citations in present year of
publications of last 3 years
Total no.of publications in last 3 years.
IMPACT PER PUBLICATION(IPP)
• Calculated as the number of citations given in the
present year of publications in the past 3 years divided
by the total number of publications in the past 3 years.
• IPP does not correct or normalise for differences in
citation practice between scientific field.
IPP=
No.of citations in present year of publications of
last 3 years
Total no.of publications in last 3 years.
H INDEX
H Index
It is an index that attempts to measure both the
productivity and impact of the published work of
a scientist or scholar.
A scholar with an index of h has published h
papers each of which has been cited by others at
least h times.
Serves as an alternative to more traditional
journal impact factor metrics in the evaluation of
the impact of the work of a particular researcher
Author H Index
The h-index “gives an estimate of the importance,
significance, and broad impact of a scientist’s
cumulative research contributions”
Hirsch, J. E. (2005). An index to quantify an
individual's scientific research output.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
102(46), 16569-16572
Finding H Index in SCOPUS
SCOPUS calculates the h-index of an author or a
group of authors using journal publications from
1996-upto current publication.
ie papers published before 1996 are not included
in the calculation. Publications such as book
chapters are not included in the list of
publications or as sources for the citation count.
SCImago is a research group from the Consejo Superior de
Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), University of Granada,
Extremadura, Carlos III (Madrid) and Alcalá de Henares,
dedicated to information analysis, representation and retrieval
by means of visualisation techniques.
Finding H Index in SCOPUS
Finding H Index in SCOPUS
Finding H Index in SCOPUS
Citation Index
A citation analysis measures the number of
times an author, article, journal or institution
is cited in the academic literature covered, in
this instance, by ISI’s Web of Science.
Journal Impact Factor 34
S COPUS
• Scopus is Elsevier's abstract and citation database
launched in 2004.
• Scopus delivers the most comprehensive
overview of the world’s research output in the
fields of science, technology, medicine, social
Science and arts and humanities
Visit: http://www.info.sciverse.com/scopus/about
Journal Impact Factor 35
Scopus helps Researchers
• Find out how many citations an article or an author has received.
• Analyze citations for a particular journal issue, volume or year.
• Use this information to complete grant or other applications quickly
and easily.
• Use the refine results overview to quickly see the main journals,
disciplines and authors that publish in one’s area of interest.
• Uncover important and relevant articles that one may otherwise
miss.
• Check out the work and citations of other authors.
• Click on the cited by and reference links to track research trends
and make connections. One can do this within or across disciplines
one is interested in.
SCOPUS – A Glance @ 2020
Journal Impact Factor 36
• Over 25,100 titles
• Over 23,452 peer-reviewed journals
(including 5,500 full open access
journals)
• 294 trade publications
• Over 852 book series
• Over 9.8 million conference papers from
over 1,20,000 worldwide events
• 77.8 million records
RESEARCH METRICES  25.11.21.pptx

RESEARCH METRICES 25.11.21.pptx

  • 1.
    Research Metrics Research Metricsis the quantitative analysis of scientific and scholarly research outputs and their impacts.  Research Metrics include a variety of measures and statistical methods for assessing the quality and broader impact of scientific and scholarly research, as well as to track researcher impact  Research Metrics measure impact and provide insight into the influence of specific journal publications, individual articles, and authors.
  • 2.
    Research Metrics Measures JournalMetrics, such as Impact Factor, helps track citation patterns within journals and determine which journals are highly-cited. Author Metrics measure the impact and productivity of a researcher. Article Metrics, or citation tracking, is used to determine if an article, book, journal, or particular author has been cited by another work. Altmetrics help researchers measure their impact from papers, data sets, websites, blog posts, and more. A collated record of all the on line shares and views of your research
  • 3.
    Journal Impact Factor 21December 2022 3 Journal Impact Factor
  • 4.
    Journal Impact Factor •Also known as “Impact Factor – IF” • Journal Citation Report of Thomson Reuters [http://thomsonreuters.com/about/] • Can be accessed by Web of Science Database. 21 December 2022 4 Journal Impact Factor
  • 5.
    Eugene Garfield PhD [16Sep 1925 -26 Feb 2017) • Chemistry, Lib Sciences & Structural Linguistics • Alma mater:Columbia and Pensylvania University. • Founder and Chairman Emeritus – Thomson Reuters Known for: • Impact Factor • Bibliometrics • Scientometrics • Science and citation index 21 December 2022 Journal Impact Factor 5
  • 6.
    • A journalimpact factor (JIF) is a measure of how many citations an average article receives over a given period. • Bibliometrics is the use of statistical methods to analyze books, articles and other publications. • The sub-field of bibliometrics which concerns itself with the analysis of scientific publications is called scientometrics
  • 7.
    First mention ofImpact Factor Garfield recommends keeping track of who cited the paper. “In effect, the system would provide a complete listing, for the publications covered, of all the original articles that had referred to the article in question.” … Such an “impact factor” may be much more indicative than an absolute count of a scientist's publications.” Here impact factor refers to the impact of the article.
  • 8.
    Impact Factors forJournals In the early 1960’s Irving H. Sher and Eugene Garfield created the Journal Impact Factor to help select journals for Science Citation Index (SCI). They knew that a core group of highly cited large journals needed to be covered in SCI, but they also wanted to include the small, but important review journals which would not be included if they relied only on publication or citation counts. Created the Journal Impact Factor
  • 9.
    Impact Factor The ImpactFactor is calculated by dividing the number of citations in the Journal Citation Report (JCR) in a particular year by the total number of articles published in the two previous years.
  • 10.
  • 12.
  • 13.
    13 Self-citations affect theevaluation of the journal Most journals have self-citation rates of less than or equal to 15% Source: JCR Science Edition (2010) o Excessive self-citation weakens the integrity of the journal’s Impact Factor o Journals with excessive self-citation may be suppressed from Journal Citation Reports until the problem is corrected 85%
  • 15.
    SNIP-Source Normalised Impactper Paper • SNIP= No.of citations in present year of publications of last 3 years Total no.of publications in last 3 years.
  • 17.
    IMPACT PER PUBLICATION(IPP) •Calculated as the number of citations given in the present year of publications in the past 3 years divided by the total number of publications in the past 3 years. • IPP does not correct or normalise for differences in citation practice between scientific field. IPP= No.of citations in present year of publications of last 3 years Total no.of publications in last 3 years.
  • 18.
  • 19.
    H Index It isan index that attempts to measure both the productivity and impact of the published work of a scientist or scholar. A scholar with an index of h has published h papers each of which has been cited by others at least h times. Serves as an alternative to more traditional journal impact factor metrics in the evaluation of the impact of the work of a particular researcher
  • 20.
    Author H Index Theh-index “gives an estimate of the importance, significance, and broad impact of a scientist’s cumulative research contributions” Hirsch, J. E. (2005). An index to quantify an individual's scientific research output. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 102(46), 16569-16572
  • 21.
    Finding H Indexin SCOPUS SCOPUS calculates the h-index of an author or a group of authors using journal publications from 1996-upto current publication. ie papers published before 1996 are not included in the calculation. Publications such as book chapters are not included in the list of publications or as sources for the citation count.
  • 22.
    SCImago is aresearch group from the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), University of Granada, Extremadura, Carlos III (Madrid) and Alcalá de Henares, dedicated to information analysis, representation and retrieval by means of visualisation techniques.
  • 27.
    Finding H Indexin SCOPUS
  • 28.
    Finding H Indexin SCOPUS
  • 29.
    Finding H Indexin SCOPUS
  • 30.
    Citation Index A citationanalysis measures the number of times an author, article, journal or institution is cited in the academic literature covered, in this instance, by ISI’s Web of Science.
  • 34.
    Journal Impact Factor34 S COPUS • Scopus is Elsevier's abstract and citation database launched in 2004. • Scopus delivers the most comprehensive overview of the world’s research output in the fields of science, technology, medicine, social Science and arts and humanities Visit: http://www.info.sciverse.com/scopus/about
  • 35.
    Journal Impact Factor35 Scopus helps Researchers • Find out how many citations an article or an author has received. • Analyze citations for a particular journal issue, volume or year. • Use this information to complete grant or other applications quickly and easily. • Use the refine results overview to quickly see the main journals, disciplines and authors that publish in one’s area of interest. • Uncover important and relevant articles that one may otherwise miss. • Check out the work and citations of other authors. • Click on the cited by and reference links to track research trends and make connections. One can do this within or across disciplines one is interested in.
  • 36.
    SCOPUS – AGlance @ 2020 Journal Impact Factor 36 • Over 25,100 titles • Over 23,452 peer-reviewed journals (including 5,500 full open access journals) • 294 trade publications • Over 852 book series • Over 9.8 million conference papers from over 1,20,000 worldwide events • 77.8 million records

Editor's Notes

  • #38 Thesis statement - your thesis statement will not necessarily argue for a position or an opinion; rather it will argue for a particular perspective on the material. Some sample thesis statements for literature reviews are as follows: The current trend in treatment for congestive heart failure combines surgery and medicine. More and more cultural studies scholars are accepting popular media as a subject worthy of academic consideration.