Libguides At Clarivate Analytics

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Journal Citation Reports is sourced from Web of Science Core Collection, the premier citation index on the Web of Science platform. Journals must undergo a rigorous evaluation by our editorial team in order to be covered in Web of Science Core Collection. We capture the cited references for all content from these journals, and we link those cited references to the cited papers.

This article-level citation data is aggregated to the journal-level at the end of the year to create the indicators available in JCR. Over 11,500 titles from the Science Citation Index-Expanded and Social Sciences Citation Index are covered in JCR. The Science and Social Science editions of JCR are released annually. Example 2017 Impact Factor Calculation: Impact Factor Numerator - Cites to recent items: The numerator looks at citations in a particular JCR year to a journal's previous two years of content. For example, the 2017 Journal Impact Factor for a journal would take into account 2017 items that cited that journal's 2015 or 2016 content. The numerator includes citations to anything published by the journal in that 2015-2016 timeframe.

Impact Factor Denominator - Number of recent items: The denominator takes into account the number of citable items published in the journal in 2015 and 2016. Citable items include articles and reviews. Document types that aren't typically cited, e.g. letters or editorial materials, are not included in the Impact Factor denominator.

Libguides At Clarivate Analytics Portal

Example 2015 Immediacy Index Calculation: Immediacy Index Numerator - Cites to recent items: The numerator looks at citations in a particular JCR year to a journal's content from the same year. For example, the 2015 Immediacy Index for a journal would take into account 2015 citations to the journal's 2015 papers. The numerator includes citations to anything published by the journal in that year. Immediacy Index Denominator - Number of recent items: The denominator takes into account the number of citable items published in the journal in 2015. Citable items include articles and reviews.

JIF Quartile: A journal's quartile ranking is determined by comparing a journal to others in its JCR category based on Impact Factor score. If a journal falls in Q1, it means that the journal performs better than at least 75% of journals in that category, based on its Impact Factor score. JIF Percentile: The journal’s rank in category, determined by Impact Factor, expressed as a percentile.

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For example, a journal with a JIF percentile of 89 performs better than 89% of journals in that category, based on its Impact Factor score. JIF percentiles give you a more granular view than quartiles do.

Thank you to all those who attended this year's Publisher Forum! You can read the recap blog post here, and download each of the session presentations below.

Fake Peer Review: What We’ve Learned at Retraction Watch Keynote speaker: Ivan Oransky In 2012, Retraction Watch was first to report on a case of fake peer review. In what struck us as a brazen bit of deception, a researcher had managed to peer review 28 of his own papers. Since then, more than 500 papers have been retracted because they were accepted based on similar schemes. In this talk, drawing from our database of more than 16,000 retractions, I’ll describe how these schemes work, where the cases are coming from, and what publishers are doing to prevent such fraud.

I’ll also put retractions for fake peer review in the context of what we’ve learned about retractions in general. About our speaker: Ivan Oransky, MD, is Distinguished Writer in Residence at New York University's Arthur Carter Journalism Institute, and co-founder of Retraction Watch. He previously was global editorial director of MedPage Today, executive editor of Reuters Health, and held editorial positions at Scientific American and The Scientist. He is the recipient of the 2015 John P.

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McGovern Award for excellence in biomedical communication from the American Medical Writers Association and has written for numerous publications, including Nature, The New Republic, and The New York Times. Oransky is also a clinical assistant professor of medicine at the New York University School of Medicine, and serves as president of the Association of Health Care Journalists. Scientific and Academic Research (SAR) at Clarivate Analytics A review of the structure and goals of Clarivate as a whole, with emphasis on the newly expanded and refocused Scientific and Academic Research (SAR) division, the home of Web of Science, InCites, Publons, and ScholarOne, among other products and services. Web of Science and ISI: The Year in Review and The Year Ahead In 2017 Clarivate devoted significant time and resources to developing the Web of Science platform – acquiring more content, displaying it more clearly, and improving discoverability.

Libguides At Clarivate Analytics School

Chris will provide an overview of key initiatives both achieved and in progress, and Nandita will review our restoration of the Institute for Scientific Information (ISI). Content Discovery: Data-Driven, Partner-Focused, and User-Friendly Don will provide details on our partnership with ImpactStory and open access transparency in Web of Science.

Tilla will review the added discoverability of the expanded ESCI; our initiatives to add “Early Access” articles to Web of Science; and our expanding XML indexing capabilities. Megan will cover the specifics of our Data Citation Index, including current offerings and in-progress enhancements. Data Science & Research Analytics for Publishers Members of the InCites and JCR teams will show and share analytic use cases and take questions from attendees. Pathways of Journal Selection and Content Curation Web of Science editors will take questions and review the journal evaluation and selection process, focused on ESCI’s three-year growth (2015-17) and 2018 content curation across journal indices, particularly the Core Collection (SCIE, SSCI, AHCI, ESCI) and the specialist indices (BIOSIS, Zoological Record). The session will generally cover editorial selection for journals, books, and conference proceedings. Mac's place longmont. For questions about this year's event or future events, please send questions to.

This entry was posted on 14.01.2020.