1 / 18

The Role of Citations in Warwick’s Strategy and Improving Them

The Role of Citations in Warwick’s Strategy and Improving Them. Nicola Owen (Academic Registrar) Professor Mark Smith (PVC Research: Science and Medicine). Introduction. What are citations ? Citation indices & impact factors ISI Highly Cited Researchers Why improve citations ?

doane
Download Presentation

The Role of Citations in Warwick’s Strategy and Improving Them

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Role of Citations in Warwick’s Strategy and Improving Them Nicola Owen (Academic Registrar) Professor Mark Smith (PVC Research: Science and Medicine)

  2. Introduction • What are citations ? • Citation indices & impact factors • ISI Highly Cited Researchers • Why improve citations ? • How do we improve citations ?

  3. What are Citations ? • A citation is a reference to a book, article or web page or other published item that can be uniquely identified. • Citations are used in scholarly works to give credit to or acknowledge the influence of previous works. • Thomson ISI, part of Thomson-Reuters Corp. is the World’s leading bibliometric data compiler. ISI created by Eugene Garfield

  4. Citation Indices • SCI – Science Citation Index • SSCI – Social Science Citation Index • AHCI - Arts and Humanities Citation Index

  5. Impact Factor E.g. Journal impact factor for 2003…. A = the number of times articles published in 2001-2 were cited in indexed journals during 2003 B = the number of "citable items" (usually articles, reviews, letters, proceedings or notes; not usually editorials, comments and letters-to-the-Editor) published in 2001-2 2003 impact factor = A/B

  6. The highest cited journals

  7. Consider impact by field Economics Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

  8. Consider impact by field • We have seen that citation rates and impact vary by field and sub-field of research • We must set citations metrics in context • Citations less relevant in the arts and humanities

  9. Highly Cited Researchers • Thomson ISIHighlyCited.com • 21 broad subject categories in life sciences, medicine, physical sciences, engineering and social sciences. • Individuals listed are the most highly cited within each category for the period 1981-1999, comprise less than 0.5 % of all publishing researchers - an extraordinary accomplishment. • Does not include the arts & humanities • Universities recognised as the best in the World have many HiCi researchers

  10. Nobel Laureates… Eugene Garfield on Nobel Laureates… • they publish five times the average number of papers • their work is cited 30 to 50 times the average • they will invariably publish several Citation Classics • most have high h-Indexes • many also appear on ISI’s HighlyCited index We can’t all be Nobel Laureates though !

  11. [2] Cambridge University = 49 [10] Oxford University = 40 [23] Imperial College = 29 [26] UCL = 23 [62] Bristol = 16 [50] Manchester = 14 [90] Birmingham = 7 [246] Warwick = 5 Where Are We Now – Highly Cited? Comparative positions include (SJTU rankings in brackets): [1] Harvard University = 80 [3] Stanford University = 93 [4] UC Berkley = 82 [5] MIT = 74 [8] Princeton University = 60 [11] Yale University = 34 [12] Cornell University = 51 [85] Brown University =15

  12. Citation impact for Institutions in 5 year overlapping periods

  13. Young institution? Young medical school? Culture of playing safe? Insufficient international networks? Lack of awareness Publishing cultures? Some disciplines and sub-disciplines cite more than others. Why might this be?

  14. Strategically: Boost research quality by regular benchmarking to world, rather than UK, standards. Reputation (underselling ourselves) international esteem THES World Rankings citations per faculty (20%) Future funding Research Assessment of Science, Technology, Engineering & Medicine (STEM) subjects from 2009 (likely to be weighted 30%) Why are we doing this?

  15. Primary focus on research quality across Warwick (i.e. not just a science/social science issue) Citations is one measure – draw up measures in discipline context Need to start measuring What’s your own h-index? What do Warwick academics publish each year? What can we do?

  16. How do we improve citations ? • Attempt to publish in top journals for the field or sub-field of research • Don’t take the comfortable option of submitting articles first to middle ranking journals • Be prepared to face rejection • Achieve maximum publicity for your research • Ensure that the correct address is used !

  17. Supporting early career staff Taking risks Mentoring Identifying journals/publishers Co-editing Networking Open access publishing? (Southampton experience) What can we do? (cont.)

More Related