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Scholarly Metrics

This page describes the various means of searching for cited and citing references, measures of influence and impact, altmetrics and bibliometrics.

Why Do a Cited Reference Search?

Tracking cited references provides many insights. For example, you can: 

  • Track the research trajectory of an individual
  • Track the history of a research idea
  • Locate current research based on earlier research
  • Determine how many times and where a publication is being cited
  • Learn who is citing a particular source
  • Track how a research topic supports other lines of scientific inquiry
  • Analyze the impact of a scholarly work 

Definitions of Common Scholarly Metrics

Journal Impact Factor (JIF):  This metric can be found in Journal Citation Reports in the Web of Science suite of resources. In a given year JIF is the ratio of all citations to a journal in the previous two years divided by the number of all scholarly items published in the journal for the same two year period. 

h-index: This number is an integer where the maximum number of papers (h) is equal to the same number of times cited. For example, an h-index of 23 means that a scholar has 23 articles that have all been cited at least 23 times. The h-index is found in Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar, but since those sources use slightly different citation data, the h-index for a given entity may vary depending on the source used. 

Citation Count:  Simply, this is the number of times an entity has been cited, whether it is an author, article, journal, research lab, etc. Often self-citations (e.g., an author citing him/herself) are removed from the overall count. Again, the citation count for a given entity can vary depending on what source is used to obtain the count. Web of ScienceScopus, and Google Scholar all provide their own citation counts.

Eigenfactor: Like JIF, this is a ratio of times cited to publications in a given window, and is found in Journal Citation Reports. However, the citations in the numerator are weighted according to an eigenvector analysis, which favors citations from journals that are themselves highly cited.

Source Normalized Impact Per paper (SNIP): This method of ranking journals looks at a citation network of a given publication and predicts the probability of having been cited in this network. SNIP is calculated with Scopus data. 

SCImago Journal Rank (SJR):This ranking is based on an eigenvector analysis, but uses a slightly different algorithm than Eigenvector. It is also based Scopus data instead of Web of Science data. 

CiteScore: This metric is Scopus's answer to Web of Science's JIF. It is a similar ratio of citations to documents, but it uses a three year window for calculating and includes all documents, not simply the peer-reviewed journal articles. 

i10: The i10 metric from Google Scholar Citations is simply the number of publications with at least 10 citations in Google Scholar.