LIS Links

First and Largest Academic Social Network of LIS Professionals in India

Latest Activity

shradhashesh commented on Dr. U. PRAMANATHAN's blog post Notice for Phase-XIII/2025/Selection Posts — MTS (Library Attendant), Senior Library Attendant, Library Clerk, Library and Information Assistant, Assistant Library Information Officer, and Librarian
7 hours ago
Pramod Kumar Sharma posted a blog post
8 hours ago
Dr. U. PRAMANATHAN posted discussions
yesterday
Dr. U. PRAMANATHAN posted blog posts
yesterday
Dr. U. PRAMANATHAN posted events
yesterday
Dr. U. PRAMANATHAN posted a blog post
Tuesday
Dr. U. PRAMANATHAN posted an event
Monday
Sumit Chakraborty posted a discussion
Monday
Archanagita Saikia is attending Md Nasm Akhtar's event

Online workshop on KOHA at Online

June 1, 2025 from 10am to 1pm
Saturday
Md Nasm Akhtar shared their event on Facebook
Saturday
Sumit Chakraborty updated their profile
Saturday
Sumit Chakraborty might attend Sourav Debnath's event
Thumbnail

Online National workshop on Library Management using Open Source Software at Dhanbad

June 16, 2025 at 10am to June 20, 2025 at 5pm
Saturday
Dr. U. PRAMANATHAN posted blog posts
May 29
Dr. U. PRAMANATHAN posted discussions
May 29
Md Nasm Akhtar posted an event

Online workshop on KOHA at Online

June 1, 2025 from 10am to 1pm
May 29
B.VERMA updated their profile
May 29
Md Nasm Akhtar posted a status
"Online workshop on KOHA"
May 29
Md Nasm Akhtar posted a status
"workshop on koha"
May 29
shradhashesh posted discussions
May 28
Hima Bindu posted a discussion
May 28
What is Journal Impact Factor?

Views: 309

Reply to This

Replies to This Forum

Impact Factor - Definition


Impact Factor is a measure of importance of scientific journals. It is calculated each year by the Institute for Scientific Information for those journals which it tracks, and are published in the Journal Citation Report. Impact Factors have a huge, but controversial, influence on the way published scientific research is perceived and evaluated.


Calculation

The Impact Factor is generally calculated based on a 3 year period. For example, the 2004 Impact factor for a journal would calculated as follows:

A = Number of times articles published in 2001-2 were cited in tracked journals during 2003
B = Number of articles published in 2001-2
2003 Impact Factor = A/B

There is some nuances to this: ISI exclude certain article types (e.g. news items, correspondence, errata) from the denominator. Also, for new journals, ISI will sometimes calculate an Impact Factor with just 2 years of data.


Pros and Cons

It is sometimes useful to be able to compare different journals and research groups. For example, a sponsor of scientific research might wish to compare the results to assess the productivity of its investments. An objective measure of the importance of different publications is then required and the impact factor is one of such. Consequently, there is a demand for measures like this.

The favorable properties of the impact factor includes:

  • Wide international coverage with more than 8400 journals from 60 countries.
  • Results are publicly and freely available
  • Easy to use and understand

Impact factors are not, however, infallible. It is, for example, questionable if the number of citations measures the quality or sheer amount of publications. Furthermore, in a journal which has long publication times, it might be impossible to cite articles new enough to fall inside the three year window. Indeed, for some journals, the time between submission and publication can be over two years, which leaves less then a year for citation. On the other hand, a longer temporal window would be slow to adjust to trend changes.

The most commonly mentioned faults of the impact factor include:

  • Number of citations does not really measure quality of publication, but also quantity of publications.
  • The temporal window for citation is too short. Classical articles are cited frequently even after several decades.
  • The nature of results in different research areas yield different amounts of publications and at different pace, which has an effect on impact factors. Generally, for example, medical journals have higher impact factors then mathematical journals.

Web Impact Factor (WIF)

No. of Link pages a particular website

WIF =    _____________________________________

Total No. of Web pages a Particular website

 

Thanks Sir.
The impact factor is one of these; it is a measure of the frequency with which the "average article" in a journal has been cited in a given period of time.
Thanks Sir
Thanks Ma'am

Dear Vijay ,

You can also see previous discussion on following path ;

http://lislinks.com/forum/topics/what-is-impact-factor

 

RSS

© 2025   Created by Dr. Badan Barman.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

Koha Workshop