Citation-Based Journal Rankings: Key Questions, Metrics, and Data Sources

This guide presents nine key questions that can help researchers make good use of citation-based journal rankings (metrics) in the natural and social sciences. The nine questions address the characteristics that distinguish one metric from another: the source documents, the citation-counting window,...

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Main Author: William H. Walters
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2017-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8063396/
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author William H. Walters
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author_sort William H. Walters
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description This guide presents nine key questions that can help researchers make good use of citation-based journal rankings (metrics) in the natural and social sciences. The nine questions address the characteristics that distinguish one metric from another: the source documents, the citation-counting window, the document types counted, the cited-document window, the impact of highly cited documents, the treatment of self-citations, the distinction between size-dependent and size-independent metrics, the use of normalization to account for disciplinary differences in impact, and the use of weighting to account for the impact or centrality of each citing journal. Next, the guide reviews 19 standard citation metrics, including the h index, g index, impact factor, source normalized impact per paper, eigenfactor, article influence score, and SCImago journal rank. Three underlying data sources (Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar) are described, along with six major data download sites: Journal Citation Reports, Eigenfactor, CWTS Journal Indicators, SCImago, Scopus Journal Metrics, Cabell's International, and Google Scholar Metrics. The paper summarizes the main criticisms of citation metrics and concludes with suggestions for their further development, dissemination, and use.
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spelling doaj.art-bc6402ce797841d0b57b69f9adee14f62022-12-21T18:18:40ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362017-01-015220362205310.1109/ACCESS.2017.27614008063396Citation-Based Journal Rankings: Key Questions, Metrics, and Data SourcesWilliam H. Walters0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9490-4032Mary Alice & Tom O’Malley Library, Manhattan College, Riverdale, NY, USAThis guide presents nine key questions that can help researchers make good use of citation-based journal rankings (metrics) in the natural and social sciences. The nine questions address the characteristics that distinguish one metric from another: the source documents, the citation-counting window, the document types counted, the cited-document window, the impact of highly cited documents, the treatment of self-citations, the distinction between size-dependent and size-independent metrics, the use of normalization to account for disciplinary differences in impact, and the use of weighting to account for the impact or centrality of each citing journal. Next, the guide reviews 19 standard citation metrics, including the h index, g index, impact factor, source normalized impact per paper, eigenfactor, article influence score, and SCImago journal rank. Three underlying data sources (Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar) are described, along with six major data download sites: Journal Citation Reports, Eigenfactor, CWTS Journal Indicators, SCImago, Scopus Journal Metrics, Cabell's International, and Google Scholar Metrics. The paper summarizes the main criticisms of citation metrics and concludes with suggestions for their further development, dissemination, and use.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8063396/Impactindicatormetricrankingrating
spellingShingle William H. Walters
Citation-Based Journal Rankings: Key Questions, Metrics, and Data Sources
IEEE Access
Impact
indicator
metric
ranking
rating
title Citation-Based Journal Rankings: Key Questions, Metrics, and Data Sources
title_full Citation-Based Journal Rankings: Key Questions, Metrics, and Data Sources
title_fullStr Citation-Based Journal Rankings: Key Questions, Metrics, and Data Sources
title_full_unstemmed Citation-Based Journal Rankings: Key Questions, Metrics, and Data Sources
title_short Citation-Based Journal Rankings: Key Questions, Metrics, and Data Sources
title_sort citation based journal rankings key questions metrics and data sources
topic Impact
indicator
metric
ranking
rating
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8063396/
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