-
CiteScore (CS) of an
academic journal is a
measure reflecting the
yearly average number of
citations to
recent articles published in that journal. It...
-
sufficient quality each year
according to four
numerical measures: h-Index,
CiteScore, SJR (SCImago
Journal Rank) and SNIP (source
normalized impact per paper)...
- journal-level
metrics are
available from
other organizations. For example,
CiteScore is a
metric for
serial titles in
Scopus launched in
December 2016 by Elsevier...
- per do****ent in a 2-year period,
abbreviated as
Cites per Doc. (2y). Journal-level
metrics CiteScore Journal Citation Reports Journalology Impact factor...
- journal-level
metrics have been proposed, most citation-based:
Impact factor and
CiteScore –
reflecting the
average number of
citations to
articles published in...
- top universities. The
index is
based on the set of the scientist's most
cited papers and the
number of
citations that they have
received in
other publications...
-
publishers to be in the top 10
percent of the most-
cited journals in
their subject category based on the
CiteScore while they did not have an
impact factor. It...
-
period and in a
given index, such as the
journal impact factor or the
citescore. It is used by
academic institutions in
decisions about academic tenure...
- The
Eigenfactor score,
developed by
Jevin West and Carl
Bergstrom at the
University of Washington, is a
rating of the
total importance of a scientific...
- 2022) and Scopus'
CiteScore, 72 of the
journals published by
Frontiers have a
Journal Impact Factor and 79
journals have a
CiteScore. In 2015, Frontiers...