enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Impact factor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impact_factor

    For example, in 2007, the specialist journal Folia Phoniatrica et Logopaedica, with an impact factor of 0.66, published an editorial that cited all its articles from 2005 to 2006 in a protest against the "absurd scientific situation in some countries" related to use of the impact factor. [44] The large number of citations meant that the impact ...

  3. Journal Citation Reports - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journal_Citation_Reports

    the number of times articles published in the journal during each of the most recent 10 years were cited by individual specific journals during the year (the twenty journals with the greatest number of citations are given) and several measures derived from these data for a given journal: its impact factor, immediacy index, etc.

  4. CiteScore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CiteScore

    In any given year, the CiteScore of a journal is the number of citations, received in that year and in previous three years, for documents published in the journal during the total period (four years), divided by the total number of published documents (articles, reviews, conference papers, book chapters, and data papers) in the journal during the same four-year period: [3]

  5. SCImago Journal Rank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SCImago_Journal_Rank

    The SCImago Journal Rank (SJR) indicator is a measure of the prestige of scholarly journals that accounts for both the number of citations received by a journal and the prestige of the journals where the citations come from.

  6. American Book Review - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Book_Review

    The American Book Review was founded in 1977 by Ronald Sukenick. [6] According to author and essayist Raymond Federman, in his reading with American Book Review in 2007, Sukenick founded the American Book Review because The New York Times had stopped reviewing books by "that group labeled experimental writers", and Sukenick wanted to start a "journal where we can review books that everyone is ...

  7. Citation impact - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citation_impact

    For instance, most papers in Nature (impact factor 38.1, 2016) were only cited 10 or 20 times during the reference year (see figure). Journals with a lower impact (e.g. PLOS ONE, impact factor 3.1) publish many papers that are cited 0 to 5 times but few highly cited articles. [21]

  8. Rankings of academic publishers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rankings_of_academic...

    Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology. Zuccala, A., Someren, M., & Bellen, M. (2014). A machineā€learning approach to coding book reviews as quality indicators: Toward a theory of megacitation. Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, 65(11), 2248–2260.

  9. Journal ranking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journal_ranking

    Journal Tier – One of the few indicators based not on citations but objective user ratings and reviews. [12] PageRank – in 1976 a recursive impact factor that gives citations from journals with high impact greater weight than citations from low-impact journals was proposed. [13]