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The journal is sponsored by the section "Information Systems" (Wirtschaftsinformatik) of the German Association for Business Research and the special interest group "Business Informatics" of the Gesellschaft für Informatik with more than 1200 members. It is also an affiliated journal of the Association for Information Systems.
The impact factor relates to a specific time period; it is possible to calculate it for any desired period. For example, the JCR also includes a five-year impact factor, which is calculated by dividing the number of citations to the journal in a given year by the number of articles published in that journal in the previous five years. [14] [15]
Journal ranking is widely used in academic circles in the evaluation of an academic journal's impact and quality. Journal rankings are intended to reflect the place of a journal within its field, the relative difficulty of being published in that journal, and the prestige associated with it.
The impact factor (IF) or journal impact factor (JIF) of an academic journal is a scientometric index calculated by Clarivate that reflects the yearly mean number of citations of articles published in the last two years in a given journal, as indexed by Clarivate's Web of Science.
The Journal of Business Research is a monthly peer-reviewed academic journal covering research on all aspects of business. It was established in 1973 [1] and is published by Elsevier. The editors-in-chief are Naveen Donthu (Georgia State University) and Anders Gustafsson (BI Norwegian Business School).
SJR is developed by the Scimago Lab, [5] originated from a research group at the University of Granada. The SJR indicator is a variant of the eigenvector centrality measure used in network theory. Such measures establish the importance of a node in a network based on the principle that connections to high-scoring nodes contribute more to the ...
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]
Such meta-research has analyzed and recently published, ultimately identifing the top 2% of the world's most influential scientists, in a unified way across each and every scientific sub-discipline. [9] [10] In general, the parameters that are taken into account and eventually determine the new composite-index (c-score) are the following ones: