Title: VETERINARY SCIENCES:
1VETERINARY SCIENCES A BIBLIOMETRIC OVERVIEW
Adam Finch Bibliometrics Analyst Wiley-Blackwell
2Veterinary Sciences A Bibliometric Overview
- How Impact Factors are calculated and why they
matter
- The problems with Impact Factors
- How to improve your Impact Factor
- Other metric and journal ranking systems
3The Impact Factor
Impact Factor for JCR Year x Citations in Year
x to Papers from x-1 and x-2 Number of
Articles Reviews in x-1 and x-2
For Example
4Subject Impact Factors Other Metrics
- Immediacy IndexCites in Year X to source
articles published in Year X
- Cited Half LifeThe median age of the articles
that were cited in Year X. Half of those articles
that have been cited were published more
recently than the cited half-life.
- Median Impact FactorThe median value of all
individual journal Impact Factors in a given
subject category.
- Aggregate Impact FactorThe number of citations
from Year X to all articles in a given subject
category published in Years X-1 and X-2, divided
by the number of articles from all journals in
the category published in Years X-1 and X-2.
5Veterinary Sciences Subject Impact Factors
6The Uses of Impact Factors and the Web of Science
- Informing editorial decisions
- Identifying the most frequently cited authors
- Identifying the hot topics
- Identifying the less frequently cited papers
- Attracting the best authors
- Increasing the Impact Factor increases readership
and extends journal reach - Publication in high-impact journals lends
authority to articles - The next Research Assessment Exercise will
include a bibliometric criterion
- Encouraging librarians to subscribe
- Identifying high-impact journals for subscription
- Prioritising library provision of access to
subscribed content - Bibliometrics have been an established tool since
the 1970s
7Impact Factors are therefore crucially important
but far from infallible
8The Problems with Impact Factors and the Web of
Science
- Requirements for inclusion
- Limiting inclusion is important to maintain the
value of a cite. - Tests for inclusion do not account, for example,
for a journal with minimal niche appeal but
massive citation activity. - Standards applied today are not the same as the
standards applied originally. - Wide variation in subject coverage eg, Arts
Humanities 50 of all journals indexed, Chemistry
93 indexed. Veterinary Sciences have 80
coverage. (Moed, H.F. (2005) Citation Analysis in
Research Evaluation,(Dordrecht Springer). Page
126, Table 7.3).
- Indexing for the Impact Factor
- Issues indexed at the end of a calendar year have
less time to accrue citations within the Impact
Factor window.
9The Problems with Impact Factors and the Web of
Science
- Journal Impact Factors are seeing inflation of
approximately 2.6 per annum Benjamin M.
Althouse, Jevin D. West, Ted C. Bergstrom, and
Carl T. Bergstrom, "Differences in Impact Factor
Across Fields and Over Time" (April 23, 2008).
Department of Economics, UCSB. Departmental
Working Papers. Paper 2008-4-23) - Variation in the inflation across subject areas
is making worse an already difficult variation
between ISI categories.
- Because Impact Factors are released once per year
rather than as a rolling service, there is a
limited facility to report errors in calculation
or listing of source items. - If source items or citations have not been
counted correctly historically, there is no way
to correct for the inaccuracy.
10The Problems with Impact Factors and the Web of
Science
- Wide variations in subject areas eg, 2007
Aggregate Impact Factor for Oncology was 4.551
for Vet Sciences, 1.124 for Area Studies, 0.417.
There are variations even within similar spheres
eg, 2007 Aggregate Impact Factor for
Psychology, Developmental was 2.112 for
Psychology, Psychoanalysis, 1.191. - If an area is not currently well-indexed (eg,
Philosophy of Education) this is an entry barrier
to all journals in that subject as cross-citation
is not counted. - Criteria for inclusion in a subject area not
clear or easily appealed.
- Journals have widely varying levels of
self-citation anywhere from a twenthieth to a
third of all citations can be self-cites. - There is anecdotal evidence from some subject
areas of Editors insisting on authors inserting
into their articles unnecessary citations to
their journal a practice no publisher should
support. - ISI does suspend journals from the JCR if they
have evidence of systematic abuse.
11The Problems with Veterinary Sciences
- Case studies are included in the denominator of
the Impact Factor but are themselves cited less
frequently than articles this significantly
dilutes Impact Factors in the subject area. - Case reports are sometimes included in the
denominators of other subjects Impact Factors
but sometimes they are not. This inconsistency is
particularly problematic for journals that span
several subject areas.
- Journals in Veterinary Sciences often address
niche topics. - Citation levels between these niche areas vary
significantly. - This makes it difficult to compare Veterinary
Sciences journals even within the subject
category.
12How to Get an Impact Factor
- Have a basic level of citation activity
- Address a niche area with the journal
...or VERY regional...
- Conform to journal publishing norms
13Improving Impact Basic Tips
- Balancing the Impact Factor denominator
- Maximising readership of best papers
- Publishing themed collections
- Publishing materials at the start of the calendar
year
- Minimising publication times
- Identifying and focusing on the hot topics
- Dont ask authors to increase journal
self-citation
14Improving Impact Using Analyses
Talk to your publisher about what they can do
15Improving Impact Wiley-Blackwell Analyses
- Most/Least Cited Articles
- Impact Factor Deconstruction Prediction
- Look at article contribution to Impact Factor
16SCOPUS
gt3,400 Life Sciences Journals
gt5,500 Physical Sciences Journals
gt2,800 Social Sciences Journals
gt5,300 Health Sciences Journals
Only goes back to 1996 (Web of Science goes back
to 1950s)
SCImago calculates unofficial Impact Factor for
SCOPUS data
Variety of online analysis tools (most Web of
Science analysis is offline)
17Other Ranking Systems SJR (SCIMago Journal Rank)
Like the Impact Factor, the denominator is the
number of source documents published by the
journal.
Weights citations so that a citation from a
good journal is worth more, like Googles
PageRank.
Uses a three year citation window.
Based on data from Scopus for 1996 onwards rather
than the Web of Science.
Designed by SCIMago, a team involved in Scopus
creation.
Journal , country and subject ratings are
produced.
Currently free and searchable.
Iterative process, therefore more difficult to
predict or deconstruct.
18Other Ranking Systems - Eigenfactor
The EigenFactor is the percentage of citations
that a journal receives from the 8,000
publications.
Based on ISIs Web of Science data.
Like the SJR, weights citations using PageRank.
The citation window is 5 years instead of 2.
All self-citations are omitted.
Compensates for varying levels of citation
activity across different subject areas.
Currently free and searchable.
Calculation is based on algorithms and matrixes,
making it more difficult to analyse or predict.
19Other Ranking Systems Transparency versus
Accuracy
IF Year x Year x Cites to Papers from x-1 and
x-2 Source items x-1 and x-2
20Author Ranking Systems
- H-Index
- Proposed by Jorge Hirsch in 2005.
- An individual has a index of h, when they have
published at least h papers, each of which has
been cited at least h times - So, an h-index of 10 means that the author has
published 10 papers cited at least 10 times each. - Numerous criticisms have been levelled at the
metric, but it is still very widely used.
21Author Ranking Systems
- G-Index
- Proposed by Leo Egghe in 2006.
- An individual has a g-index of g when they have
published at least g papers which have in total
been cited more than g2 times. - So, a g-index of 10 means that an author has
produced 10 publications, which have in total
accrued at least 100 citations amongst them.
22Author Ranking Systems
- H(2)-Index
- Proposed by Marek Kosmulksi in 2006.
- An individual has an index of k when each
publication in a ranked list has been cited at
least k2 times. - So, an H(2) of 10 means that the 10th most cited
article has been cited at least 100 times.
23Author Ranking Systems
a index
m index
m quotient
?
ar index
r index
hw index
24The Road Ahead
- At the moment, its the Wild West the
uncivilised frontier being tapped for gold
- ISI will face the new competition from SCOPUS,
hopefully initiating a service/facility arms
race
- Development of yet more new methodologies eg,
Google Scholar and INK for indexing, more author
indexes, more ranking systems
- Over time, the merits of some systems will win
out and consensus will emerge
- So should Editors focus on metrics or serving the
community? To hedge your bets, go for the latter
25Thank You
Adam Finch Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford,
UK afinch_at_wiley.com