On Moose and Medians (Or Why We Are Stuck With The Impact Factor) - 0 views
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Le Web of Science et le JCR n'ont pas les mêmes modalités de calcul de cumul de citations. Les calculs de médianes sur le JCR sont impossibles en raison de la dichotomie des deux produits. On reste bloqué sur des calculs de moyennes parce que le JCR ne permet pas de faire autre chose. Il se contente de mentionner à la marge l'Eigenfactor (sans l'expliquer) et le JIF percentile comme alternatives à ses calculs bruts.
Data Citation Standards: Progress, But Slow Progress - 1 views
Scientific Reports On Track To Become Largest Journal In The World - 0 views
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PLOS ONE is poised to lose its claim as the largest journal in the world soon, with rival journal, Scientific Reports, taking its place. Scientific Reports, published by Springer Nature was a relative latecomer to the scene, and, at the time of its launch, many skeptics did not believe that there would be room for yet another multidisciplinary open access journal.
The Measure of All Things: Some Notes on CiteScore - 0 views
CiteScore-Flawed But Still A Game Changer - 0 views
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Last Thursday, Elsevier announced CiteScore metrics, a free citation reporting service for the academic community. The primary metric promoted by this service is also aptly named CiteScore and is similar, in many ways, to the Impact Factor. Both CiteScore and the Impact Factor are journal-level indicators built around a ratio of citations to documents.
CRExplorer - Cited References Explorer - 2 views
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Which are the most important papers in the history of a field? On whose shoulders of giants does an author stand? Where to look for the intellectual roots of a research topic? These questions can be answered by using the program CitedReferencesExplorer (CRExplorer). The CRExplorer is a new software development which is based on the programs provided at Loet Leydesdorff's homepage.
L'évaluation de la recherche en question(s), un ouvrage collectif sous format... - 1 views
PlumX Pitt Univ : altmetrics - 4 views
http://figshare.com/faqs - 0 views
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Who/what/when/where/why is figshare? figshare allows researchers to publish all of their data in a citable, searchable and sharable manner. All data is persistently stored online under the most liberal Creative Commons licence, waiving copyright where possible. This allows scientists to access and share the information from anywhere in the world with minimal friction. The site offers upload times of mere seconds for all file formats, providing a citable, searchable endpoint for researchers. figshare offers unlimited storage space for data that is made publicly available on the site, and 1GB of free storage space for users looking for a secure, private area to store their research. Users of the site maintain full control over the management of their research whilst benefiting from global access, version control and secure backups in the cloud. figshare was started by a frustrated Imperial College PhD student as a way to disseminate all research outputs and not just static images through traditional academic publishing. It is now supported by Digital Science, a Macmillan Publishers company."