Evaluation Tools Journal Impact Factor Journal Ranking Citations H-index Page 1 of 12
Journal Impact Factor Journal Citation Reports is a comprehensive resource that allows you to evaluate and compare journals using citation data. The Journal Impact Factor is the average number of times articles from the journal published in the past two years have been cited in the JCR year. It is calculated by dividing the number of citations in the JCR year by the total number of articles published in the two previous years. You can find impact factors by using the Journal Citation Reports. Select 'Search for a specific journal' option and click 'Submit': Choose a search option from the 'Search by' drop-down box: type full journal title or choose the title from the list of full journal titles link and click 'Search'. You can also search by 'abbreviated title' (see the examples below the search box): The result displays the information, including the impact factor: For more information about this journal click the journal name. Page 2 of 12
Journal Ranking The Journal Ranking table shows the ranking of the current journal in its subject categories based on the Journal Impact Factor. For ranking of a specific journal in its subject categories, based on Impact Factor, select 'View a group of journals by' and click 'Submit': In the Subject Category Selection screen, choose the category you want from the drop-down list (sort by impact factor) and click 'Submit': Page 3 of 12
The Journal Summary List can be re-sorted using the 'Sort Again' button and the drop-down list: Page 4 of 12
Citations Web of Science SCOPUS Citations in Web of Science You can find the number of citations for each article of a specific author by using the 'author search' tab in Web of Science. Type last name and initials of the author in the 'author search' tab and click 'Next': Select research domains associated with author (optional) or check the 'All Research Domains' checkbox and then click 'Next': Page 5 of 12
Select the organizations associated with the author and then click 'Search': Library Service Section Elyachar Central Library In the 'Sort by' option, you can change the order appearance of the articles by years, time cited, etc. Page 6 of 12
Citations in SCOPUS Type last name, initials and the affiliation (e.g. Technion) of the author in the 'author search' tab and click 'Search': In the author results click on the number of publications associated with the author: Change result's order (sort by) by date, times cited, relevance, etc. Page 7 of 12
H-index Web of Science SCOPUS The H Index was developed by J.E. Hirsch. The h-index is based on a list of publications ranked in descending order by the times cited. The value of h is equal to the number of papers (N) in the list that have N or more citations. For example, an h index of 20 means there are 20 items, that have 20 citations or more. H index in Web of Science You can find the h-index of an author by using the 'author search' tab in Web of science database. Type last name and initials of the author in the 'author search' tab and click 'Next': Page 8 of 12
Select research domains associated with author (optional) or check 'All Research Domains' checkbox and then click 'Next': Select the organizations associated with the author and then click 'Search': In the 'author search results' page, click 'create citation report': Page 9 of 12
The following screen displays h index of the author, according to the items indexed within Web of Science: H index in SCOPUS SCOPUS calculates the h index of an author from 1996 current. Type last name, initials and affiliation (e.g. Technion) of author in 'author search' tab and click 'Search': For h index of the author mark author name and click 'View citation Overview': Page 10 of 12
The Citation Overview includes the number of times documents were cited by publication year. It also includes publication date range shown in the Overview options box and cumulative information for the years before the start date and after the end date: Page 11 of 12
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