IMAGES

  1. Author Metrics (including h-index)

    h index for researchers

  2. What is an H-index?

    h index for researchers

  3. h-index

    h index for researchers

  4. Number of researchers with h index in four different research fields

    h index for researchers

  5. h-Index and Research Impact

    h index for researchers

  6. The gender gap in H-index for researchers who obtained their PhD less

    h index for researchers

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COMMENTS

  1. h-index

    The h-index is an author-level metric that measures both the productivity and citation impact of the publications, initially used for an individual scientist or scholar. The h-index correlates with success indicators such as winning the Nobel Prize, being accepted for research fellowships and holding positions at top universities. [1] The index is based on the set of the scientist's most cited ...

  2. What is a good H-index for each academic position?

    A good h-index can vary depending on the field of study and the stage of a researcher's career. Generally, an h-index of 10 is considered good for early-career researchers, while a score of 20 is typically seen as a good benchmark for mid-career scholars. For full professors, an h-index of 30 or above is often expected.

  3. What is a good H-index?

    3. 9. >. 1. In this case, the researcher scored an H-index of 6, since he has 6 publications that have been cited at least 6 times. The remaining articles, or those that have not yet reached 6 citations, are left aside. A good H-index score depends not only on a prolific output but also on a large number of citations by other authors.

  4. What is a good h-index? [with examples]

    Now let's talk numbers: what h-index is considered good? According to Hirsch, a person with 20 years of research experience with an h-index of 20 is considered good, 40 is great, and 60 is remarkable. But let's go into more detail and have a look at what a good h-index means in terms of your field of research and stage of career.

  5. Library Guides: Calculate your h-index: Using the h-index

    h-index = the number of publications with a citation number greater than or equal to h. For example, 15 publications cited 15 times or more, is a h-index of 15. Read more about the h-index, first proposed by J.E. Hirsch, as An index to quantify an individual's scientific research output .

  6. Calculate Your Academic Footprint: Your H-Index

    The h-index captures research output based on the total number of publications and the total number of citations to those works, providing a focused snapshot of an individual's research performance. Example: If a researcher has 15 papers, each of which has at least 15 citations, their h-index is 15.

  7. The ultimate how-to-guide on the h-index

    Step 1: List all your published articles in a table. Step 2: For each article gather the number of how often it has been cited. Step 3: Rank the papers by the number of times they have been cited. Step 4: The h-index can now be inferred by finding the entry at which the rank in the list is greater than the number of citations. Here is an ...

  8. The h-Index: Understanding its predictors, significance, and criticism

    Introduction. The h-index is a commonly used metric to measure the productivity and impact of academic researchers. It was first introduced in 2005, and since then, the h-index has become an important tool for evaluating researchers, departments, and institutions.[] The calculation of the h-index is relatively simple, yet it confuses novice authors.

  9. Measuring your research impact: H-Index

    The Web of Science uses the H-Index to quantify research output by measuring author productivity and impact. H-Index = number of papers ( h) with a citation number ≥ h. Example: a scientist with an H-Index of 37 has 37 papers cited at least 37 times. Advantages of the H-Index: Measures quantity and impact by a single value.

  10. Explainer: what is an H-index and how is it calculated?

    What is the H-index and how is it calculated? The H-Index is a numerical indicator of how productive and influential a researcher is. It was invented by Jorge Hirsch in 2005, a physicist at the ...

  11. h-index

    The h-index is a simple way to measure the impact of your work and other people's research. It does this by looking at the number of highly impactful publications a researcher has published. The higher the number of cited publications, the higher the h-index, regardless of which journal the work was published in.

  12. Finding an Author's H-Index

    The h-index, created by Jorge E. Hirsch in 2005, is an attempt to measure the research impact of a scholar. In his 2005 article Hirsch put forward "an easily computable index, h, which gives an estimate of the importance, significance, and broad impact of a scientist's cumulative research contributions."

  13. Library Guides: Measuring Research Impact and Quality: h-index

    The h-index is a measure used to indicate the impact and productivity of a researcher based on how often his/her publications have been cited. A scientist has index h if h of his/her Np papers have at least h citations each, and the other (Np − h) papers have no more than h citations each. (Hirsch, JE (15 November 2005) PNAS 102 (46) 16569 ...

  14. How do I find the h-index for an author?: Home

    Enter the Author's last name/first initial as directed and click search. 4. Refine your search by organizations [e.g., Mayo], research area or other filters. 5. Review your results. 6. On the Author results page, click Create Citation Report to the right of the first citation. 7. From the Citation Report screen, see the h-index in the right ...

  15. The h-Index: Understanding its predictors, significance, and ...

    The h-index is an author-level scientometric index used to gauge the significance of a researcher's work. The index is determined by taking the number of publications and the number of times these publications have been cited by others. Although it is widely used in academia, many authors find its calculation confusing.

  16. Do researchers know what the h-index is? And how do they ...

    The h-index is a widely used scientometric indicator on the researcher level working with a simple combination of publication and citation counts. In this article, we pursue two goals, namely the collection of empirical data about researchers' personal estimations of the importance of the h-index for themselves as well as for their academic disciplines, and on the researchers' concrete ...

  17. LibGuides: Research metrics: Find Researcher Metrics (H-index)

    1. To find a researcher's h-index with Google Scholar, search for their name. 2. If a user profile comes up* with the correct name, discipline, and institution, click on that. 3. The h-index will be displayed for that author under "citation indices" on the top right-hand side. * If no user profile comes up, you'll need to use another tool, like ...

  18. What is an h-index? How do I find the h-index for a particular author

    The h-index is a number intended to represent both the productivity and the impact of a particular scientist or scholar, or a group of scientists or scholars (such as a departmental or research group). The h-index is calculated by counting the number of publications for which an author has been cited by other authors at least that same number ...

  19. What Is Good H-Index? H-Index Required For An Academic Position

    PhD Student: An h-index between 1 and 5 is typical for PhD students nearing the end of their program, reflecting their early stage in academic publishing. Postdoc and Assistant Professor: Early career researchers like postdoctoral fellows or assistant professors often find an h-index around 5 to 10 impressive, indicating a solid start in their respective fields.

  20. The h-Index: A Helpful Guide for Scientists

    The h-index is a measure of research performance and is calculated as the highest number of manuscripts from an author (h) that all have at least the same number (h) of citations. The h-index is known to penalize early career researchers and does not take into account the number of authors on a paper. Alternative indexes have been created ...

  21. Explaining H-index, i10-index, G-index & other research metrics

    It is commonly known as the Hirsch number or Hirsch index. It was developed by American physicist Jorge E. Hirsch in 2005. h-index can be defined as for a given value of h, the researchers should h number of published articles that are cited at least by h-times. Suppose the author has an h-index of 25, which means that each of his published ...

  22. Scopus

    Scopus is the most comprehensive and reliable source of research information for scholars and researchers. With Scopus , you can find and verify the author profiles of any publication, as well as track their citations, h-index, and affiliations. Register or sign in to access the Scopus author lookup tool.

  23. The ha-index: The average citation h-index

    This phenomenon of the exponential rise of the h-index of all researchers over the years (Hu, Leydesdorff, & Rousseau, 2020) makes the comparison of higher h-indices more difficult than at the time of its launch, where Hirsch suggested that an h-index of 20 after 20 years of research activity is a sign of success and exceptional h-indices of 40 ...

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