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H-indexes & Aging Peter Ingwersen Royal School of LIS, Denmark
University College, Oslo, Norway, 2011
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H-indexes (2005 …) Hirsch's h-index Proposed by J.E. Hirsch in his paper An index to quantify an individual's scientific research output, arXiv:physics/ v5 29 Sep It aims to provide a robust single-number metric of an academic's impact, combining quality with quantity. h is that rank number of item(s) which, sorted by citations, at least have received h citations over a given period of time h = 20: 20 items have received ≥ 20 cits Ingwersen 2011
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G-index – etc. Egghe's g-index Proposed by Leo Egghe in his paper Theory and practice of the g-index, Scientometrics, Vol. 69, No 1 (2006), pp It aims to improve on the h-index by giving more weight to highly-cited articles. Zhang's e-index published in his paper The e-index, complementing the h-index for excess citations, PLoS ONE, Vol 5, Issue 5 (May 2009), e5429. The e-index is the (square root) of the surplus of citations in the h-set beyond h2, i.e., beyond the theoretical minimum required to obtain a h-index of 'h'. The aim of the e-index is to differentiate between scientists with similar h-indices but different citation patterns. Ingwersen 2011
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H-index … etc. Can be demonstrated by Google Scholar or Web of Science (sort by citations) The derivated indexes are more cumbersome to calculate in WoS Ingwersen 2011
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Ageing of journals or articles
Cited half-life - diachronic: Acumulate citations forward in time by year: yrs Citations Cum: † 1/2 life= 132/2 = 66 = ca. 4,2 years Ingwersen 2011
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Ageing of journals or articles – 2
Ingwersen 2011
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Synchronic Cited Half-life
This is shown in JCR (see earlier/next slide) It counts citations given in present year to a journal for each year’s publications back in time! Ingwersen 2011
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JASIST 2 Ingwersen 2010
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Ingwersen 2011
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