Scopus Supporting Excellence in Research and Learning.

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Scopus Supporting Excellence in Research and Learning

Transcript of Scopus Supporting Excellence in Research and Learning.

Page 1: Scopus Supporting Excellence in Research and Learning.

ScopusSupporting Excellence in Research and Learning

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What is SciVerse?

• Integrated Content & Discovery Tools• Productivity-Enhancing Applications

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What is SciVerse Scopus?

The largest abstract and citation database of peer-reviewed research literature and quality web sources.

More than 19,000 titles from more than 5,000 international publishers worldwide

Over 43 million records, 23 million patents from 5 patent offices worldwide

SciVerse Scopus also offers full integration of the scientific web in its search results with: 435 million scientific web pages

Over 80 selected sources e.g. institutional repositories, digital archives and special subject collections

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Broadest source for research answers

17,800Peer reviewed journals

600Trade journals

350Book series

A rich and extended coverage including

Abstracts and citations from> 5000 publishers

3,6 Million conference papers(10% of Scopus records)

“Articles in Press” from more than3000 titles

23 Million Patents

1,200 Open Access journals 80% of all Scopus records have an

abstract Abstracts going back to 1823 40 languages covered 380 m integrated scientific websites

via Scirus.com

– Chief librarian, The Food and Agricultural

Organization of the United Nations

> 18,500titles

“It is broader in scope but also richer in different kinds of content. It is much easier to use and therefore has more immediate impact.”

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Breadth of coverage acrosssubject areas

More than 18,500 titles in Scopus, titles can be in more than one subject area

Social Sciences 6,250

• Psychology

• Economics

• Business

• A&H

• etc.,

Health Sciences 5,950

• (100% Medline)

• Nursing

• Dentistry

• etc.,

Physical Sciences 5,300

• Chemistry

• Physics

• Engineering

• etc.,

Life Sciences 3,700

• Neuroscience

• Pharmacology

• Biology

• etc.,

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Quality selection by an independent, international board

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Journalpolicy

• English language abstracts available

• All cited references in Roman alphabet

• Convincing editorial concept/policy

• Level of peer-review

• Diversity in provenance of editors

• Diversity in provenance of authors

Quality ofcontent

• Academic contribution to the field

• Clarity of abstracts

• Conformity with journal’s aims & scope

• Readability of articles

Citedness• Citedness of journal articles in Scopus• Citedness of editors in Scopus

Regularity • No delay in publication schedule

Accessibility

• Content available online• English-language journal home page• Quality of home page

Eligibility

• Peer-review

• English abstracts

• Regular publication

Scopus selection criteria a combinationof quantitative and qualitative measures

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Broader coverage thannearest peer

Scopus (Total: 19,981)Web of Science(Total: 11,456)

9,458 <89610,523

www.jisc-adat.com

“The Scopus surplus”

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Breadth of coverage acrossgeographical areas

l

Wider coverage gives a more accurate picture of the research landscape

In Thousands

Nearest competitor Scopus

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Broader coverage means more citations

Number of citations to most cited articles in WoS and Scopus

Scopus has on average 10% more citations per article

>7,000 citations for these examples

In Thousands Nearest competitor Scopus

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How do you cope with the explosion of information?

Source: Outsell, Inc “STM End-User Survey Part 1 – Scientists and Engineers” - Volume 3, June 11, 2009College Students’ Perceptions of the Libraries and Information Resources: A Report to the OCLC Membership. Dublin,OH: OCLC, 2006

Trends in the information age

Science is getting more competitive, more international andmore inter-disciplinary

What about the quality of information?

• Less time to do more research

• Researchers spend 10.7 hours per week in 2009 finding information compared to 5.5 hours in 2006

• 36% of online searches fail to find relevant information

• 89% college students use Google to search literature only 2% start from a library web site

• 84% of researchers report an increase in pressure to deliver morequickly than a year ago

– Study of the British Library and JISC

“Many young people do not find library-sponsored resources intuitive and therefore prefer to use

Google or Yahoo instead – These offer a familiar, if simplistic solution, for their study needs.”

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Refine and Analyse Your Results

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Scopus as a research evaluation solution...

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Scopus as a research evaluation solution...

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Refine and Analyse Your Results

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Refine and Analyse Your Results

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Refine and Analyse Your Results

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Refine and Analyse Your Results

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Refine and Analyse Your Results

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Affiliation Identifier

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Affiliation profile in Scopus

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Affiliation profile in Scopus

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Affiliation profile in Scopus

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Refine and Analyse Your Results

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Refine and Analyse Your Results

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Refine and Analyse Your Results

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Author Identifier

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Author Identifier

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The Hirsch index

• The Hirsch or h-index is rapidly becoming viewed as an alternative measure to the impact factor for performance evaluation.

• Published by Jorge E. Hirsch in August 2005

• Popular with academic community

• Can be calculated easily using the Citation Tracker and the search result page searching options.

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H-Index in the author details page

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The H-index: a definition

‘The H-index is the highest number of papers a scientist

has that have at least that number of citations.’

Nature (2005)

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H-Index in the author details page

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Currently in the market? – Impact Factor

Impact Factor pros • Easy to understand • Pervasive - stranglehold

Impact Factor cons • Little transparency – underlying database not publicly available – Impact Factors cannot be reconstructed

• Citation windows available are biased• 2 years favours rapidly moving fields• 5 years favours slowly moving fields

• Subject field differences*• Easy to mislead and manipulate*

(*more on next slides)

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SJR and SNIP are strong metrics

SCImago Journal Rank (SJR)• Prestige metric – similar to Google PageRank• Citations are weighted depending on the status of the source

they come from• Developed by SCImago (Felix de Moya) -University of Granada

Source-Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP)• SNIP measures contextual citation impact • Every citation is counted as 1 citation – similar to Impact Factor• SNIP is field normalized, dependent on likelihood of citation in

subject field of source• Developed by Henk Moed, CWTS -Leiden University.

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Journal metrics fully integrated in Scopus

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Analytics function in Scopus

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Analytics function in Scopus

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Online Demo

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Thank You