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Presentation on theme: "Isid.research.ac.ir Research.sap@iums.ac.ir."— Presentation transcript:

1 isid.research.ac.ir

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3 Citation Databases Scopus Google Scholar WoS (Web of Science)

4 Scopus Elsevier! The largest abstract and citation database of peer-reviewed Literature 5,000 publishers Over 71M records and 23,700 titles Search, Find, Discover, Track, Analyze

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6 Scientometric Indicators
Personal & Institutional Indicators * H-index * G-index Journals Indicators * Citescore * SJR * SNIP * IF * Quartile

7 H-index (George Hirsch, 2005)
Concept through its Graph

8 How to calculate the h-index?
You can calculate the h-index through the following citation databases: Web of Science Google Scholar Scopus

9 G-index (Leo Egghe, 2006) Given a set of articles ranked in decreasing order of the number of citations that they received, the g-index is the unique largest number such that the top g articles received together at least g2 citations. g-index allows highly-cited papers to bolster low-cited papers

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11 CiteScore CiteScore is a simple way of measuring the citation impact of sources. All types of documents (research articles, review articles, conference proceedings, editorials errata, letters, notes, and short surveys) are included in the CiteScore calculation. Although articles in press are included in Scopus they are not included in the calculation.

12 CiteScore

13 SJR (SCImago Journal Rank)
SJR is weighted by the prestige of a journal , Subject field, quality, and reputation of the journal have a direct effect on the value of a citation. SJR emphasizes those sources that are used by prestigious titles. SJR allows the user to rank their own customized set of sources, regardless of their subject fields.

14 SNIP (Source Normalized Impact per Paper)
SNIP measures a source’s contextual citation impact by weighting citations based on the total number of citations in a subject field. It helps you make a direct comparison of sources in different subject fields.

15 Journal Impact Factor Quartile
The Journal Impact Factor quartile is the quotient of a journal’s rank in category (X) and the total number of journals in the category (Y), so that (X / Y) = Percentile Rank Z. Q1: 0.0 < Z ≤ 0.25 Q2: 0.25 < Z ≤ 0.5 Q3: 0.5 < Z ≤ 0.75 Q4: 0.75 < Z Note: InCites displays the best quartile for journals that appear in multiple Web of Science Research Areas. When a research area is specified, the quartile for that particular journal and research area is displayed. A title might have a different quartile within each different subject area it is included in. For example, Serial Title A might be categorized in "Oncology", with a CiteScore percentile of 84%, and "Cancer Research", with a CiteScore percentile of 73%. These percentiles equate to Quartile 1 and Quartile 2 respectively.

16 Web of Science Previously known as Web of Knowledge)
Produced by the Institute for Scientific Information (ISI)-(Thomson Reuters), now maintained by Clarivate Analytics that provides a comprehensive citation search. No. of records: + 90 million Temporal coverage: 1900 to present Disciplines: Science, social science, arts, humanities (supports 256 disciplines) Multiple databases (JCR, ESCI,…)

17 Web of Sciences Databases

18 How to find Impact Factor?

19 JCR Journal Citation Reports is an annual publication by Clarivate Analytics. It has been integrated with the Web of Science and is accessed from the Web of Science-Core Collections. It provides information about academic journals in the natural sciences and social sciences, including impact factors.

20 IUMS Online Library

21 ESCI The Emerging Sources Citation Index is a citation index produced since 2015 by Thomson Reuters, and now by Clarivate Analytics. According to the publisher, the index includes "peer-reviewed publications of regional importance and in emerging scientific fields“

22 Google Scholar October 2004: Google launches Google Scholar
Track citations of articles (authors, journals, institutions,…) Add all types of documents (thesis, patent,…) H-index & i10-index How to create GS profile?

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24 Visibility Mendeley ORCID ResearcherID LinkedIn ResearcherGate
Academia

25 Advantages Your research is more visible Saves time
Increases your research impact Your research output will be archived in a stable, enduring location Open access publications

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28 Innovation in research workflows: from discovery TO assessment of impact

29 Mendeley Reference manager & academic social network
organize research, collaborate with others online, and discover the latest research.

30 Mendeley Automatically generate bibliographies
Collaborate easily with other researchers online Easily import papers from other research software Find relevant papers based on what you're reading Access your papers from anywhere online Read papers on the go, with our iOS and Android

31 What is ORCID? Unique, persistent identifier for researchers & scholars Non-profit organization supporting linkages between systems Unique identifier launched in 2012 Not for profit organization Disambiguates researchers’ names 5,455,539  ORCID iDs and counting..

32 Benefits to you? Improves discoverability Connects your work Eliminates name ambiguity Stays with you throughout your career

33 ResearcherID ResearcherID is an identifying system for scientific authors. The system was introduced in January by Thomson Reuters. It allows you to create an online Profile for showcasing your publication history. Each member is assigned a unique identifier to enable researchers to manage their publication lists, track their times cited counts. It also provides a gateway for colleagues to quickly locate your published work and to identify you as a potential collaborator. In addition, your ResearcherID information integrates with the Web of Science and is ORCID compliant, allowing you to claim and showcase your publications from a single one account.

34 Academia Academia.edu is a social networking website for academics
Launched in September 2008 Share papers, monitor their impact, and follow the research in a particular field Open science or open access movements Distribute their research Let researchers keep tabs on how many people are reading the articles

35 ResearchGate A free social networking site
Launched in May 2008 in Hannover, Germany Present yourself and your research projects Find people and papers relevant to you Manage your library and contacts Collaborate and discuss with other researchers Share files and organize appointments Work and communicate more effectively

36 LinkedIn The world’s largest professional networking site
One of the most important tools employers use to find new employees Provides an easy way to promote yourself and build your network Allows you to easily collect information on companies you want to work for and prepare for your interviews Allows you to find people, like you, and connect with them through the system without needing their address

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