Be visible or perish
Bibliometric analysis use data on numbers and authors of scientific publications and on articles and the citations therein (and in patents) to measure the “output” of individuals/research teams, institutions, and countries, to identify national and international networks, and to map the development of new (multi-disciplinary) fields of science and technology. |
Altmetrics (Galliga, F. & Dyas-Correia, S. 2013. Altmetrics: rethinking the way we measure. Serials review, 39 (1): 56-61.)
Altmetrics are new measurements for the impact of scholarly content, based on how far and wide it travels through the social Web (like Twitter), social bookmarking (e.g. CiteULike) and collaboration tools (such as Mendeley) … What altmetrics hope to do is provide an alternative measure of impact, distinct from the Journal Impact Factor, which has been categorically misused and is unable to respond to the digital environment that scholarship takes place in today
H-Index
The index is based on the distribution of citations received by a given researcher's publications. Hirsch writes:
To manually calculate your h-index, organize articles in descending order, based on the number of times they have been cited e.g.
An author has 8 papers that have been cited 33, 30, 20, 15, 7, 6, 5 and 4 times. This tells us that the author's h-index is 6.
What does an h-index of 6 mean?
More context:
Altmetrics Tools and Software + tools to increase your visibility
Altmetric.com + Altmetric Explorer Altmetric tracks what people are saying about papers online on behalf of publishers, authors, libraries and institutions. The Altmetric Explorer lets you monitor, search and measure conversations about your publications and those of your competitors. Use the Explorer to deliver insights, track mentions and measure levels of attention over time. To start: download the Altmetric Bookmarklet http://www.altmetric.com/bookmarklet.php
ResearchGate Share your publications, access millions more, and publish your data. Connect and collaborate with colleagues, peers, co-authors, and specialists in your field. Get stats about views, downloads, and citations of your research. Find the right job using research-focused job board, etc.
Publish or Perish (Including H-Index) Publish or Perish is a software program that retrieves and analyzes academic citations. It uses Google Scholar and (since release 4.1) + Microsoft Academic Search to obtain the raw citations, then analyzes these and presents the metrics.
LinkedIn the world's largest professional network with 250 million members in over 200 countries and territories around the globe. Connect the world's professionals to make them more productive and successful. When you join LinkedIn, you get access to people, jobs, news, updates, and insights that help you be great at what you do.
Academia.edu Search people, Research interests and Universities.
Peer Evaluation Peer evaluation is about giving Open Access to your primary data, working papers, articles, media and having them all reviewed and discussed by your peers. - See more at: http://www.peerevaluation.org/about-peer-evaluation/#sthash.KxgZRL4a.dpuf
Social Science Research Network (SSRN) SSRN is devoted to the rapid worldwide dissemination of social science research and is composed of a number of specialized research networks in each of the social sciences.
PLoS Impact Explorer This page mashes up alt-metrics data from Altmetric with articles from the Public Library of Science (PLoS).
Check which articles are seeing the most buzz from social media sites, newspapers and in online reference managers.
Scholarometer Is a social tool to facilitate citation analysis and help evaluate the impact of an author's publications.
Microsoft Academic Search Provides Author metrics + Article metrics
Research Blogging Allows readers to easily find blog posts about serious peer-reviewed research, instead of just news reports and press releases.
SlideShare Upload and share publicly or privately PowerPoint presentations, Word documents and Adobe PDF Portfolios.
Facebook An online networking service. Connects people with friends and others who work
Altmetrics for Scopus. Can be found in the abstract view of an article, below the Related Documents box in the right-hand column. Altmetrics for Scopus will only appear when data is available.