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Measuring Scholarly Research Impact: A Tale of Two Georges

George Washington

 

  George is a researcher studying several genes associated with an increased incidence of melanoma.  He has been working in the field for 4 years post graduate school and he is co-author on 14 publications.  Here are his publications with the # of citations and 2022 Impact Factor:

1. NEJM (2022) - 11 citations

      [2022 Impact Factor = 158.5]

2. Molecular Therapy (2021) - 13 citations

      [2022 Impact Factor = 12.4]

3. Molecular Therapy (2021) - 0 citations 

      [2022 Impact Factor = 12.4]

4. Human Gene Therapy (2021) - 21 citations 

      [2022 Impact Factor = 4.2]

5. Cancer Gene Therapy (2020) - 3 citations 

      [2022 Impact Factor = 6.4]

6. Human Gene Therapy (2020) - 4 citations 

      [2022 Impact Factor = 4.2]

7. Gene Therapy (2020) - 19 citations 

      [2022 Impact Factor = 5.1]

8. Cancer Gene Therapy (2019) - 3 citations 

      [2022 Impact Factor = 6.4]

9. Cancer Gene Therapy (2019) - 2 citations 

      [2022 Impact Factor = 6.4]

 

 

   George is looking for a new job and he would like to quantify his research impact in the most flattering way possible.

 Let's look at some of the ways we can quantify his output:

H-Index: 4

G-Index: 8

cH-Index (4/y+1): 9


Conclusions

  1. G-Index is the best measure for George as it best highlights the fact that a significant percentage of his publications had an impact.
  2. Average citations per article also highlights significant impact for a relatively small sample of publications.
  3. The impact factors of the journals in which he published have increased over time - another point he may want to highlight.

 

 

 

 

Impact Factors from: ISI Web of Knowledge. Journal Citation Reports. Retrieved from http://admin-apps.webofknowledge.com/JCR/JCR?SID=3FEKOKK525bCjN%40oKe9

Photo Credit:  George Washington [Online image]. (N.D.).Retrieved March 13, 2024 from https://catalog.usmint.gov/george-washington-engraved-presidential-portrait-large-BEP200.html

 

King George III

 

   George is a researcher studying B-cell antigen presentation in nematode infections.  He has been working in the field for 4 years post graduate school and he is co-author on 14 publications.  Here are his publications with the # of citations and 2022 Impact Factor.

1. BMC Immunology (2022) - 0 citations

      [2022 Impact Factor = 3.0]

2. Immunologic Research (2022) - 8 citations

      [2022 Impact Factor = 4.4]

3. Parasite Immunology (2021) -4 citations

      [2022 Impact Factor = 2.2]

4. Parasite Immunology (2021) - 9 citations

      [2022 Impact Factor = 2.2]

5. Parasite Immunology (2020) - 2 citations

      [2022 Impact Factor = 2.2]

6. Human Immunology (2020) - 8 citations

      [2022 Impact Factor = 2.7]

7. Journal of Immunology (2020) - 1 citations

      [2022 Impact Factor = 4.4]

8. Parasite Immunology (2019) - 10 citations

      [2022 Impact Factor = 2.2]

9. Inflammation Research (2019) - 4 citations

      [2022 Impact Factor = 6.7]

 

 George is looking for a new job and he would like to quantify his research impact in the most flattering way possible.  

Let's look at some of the ways we can quantify his output:

H-Index: 4

G-Index: 5

cH-Index (4/y+1): 6


Conclusions

  1. H-Index is a good measure for George as he has had a large number of articles that have a similar number of citations without having many that have a lot of citations.
  2. cH-Index isn't so good as some of his heavier cited articles are his older ones and so they are losing 'impact' by this calculation.
  3. The impact factors of the journals he is cited in are towards the lower end for Immunology journals, so this isn't a major 'selling point' for George either.

 

 

Impact Factors from: ISI Web of Knowledge. Journal Citation Reports. Retrieved from http://admin-apps.webofknowledge.com/JCR/JCR?SID=3FEKOKK525bCjN%40oKe9

Photo Credit:  George III, King of England [Online image]. (N.D.).Retrieved October 30,, 2015 from http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/gwhtml/1775.html