Transcript Slide 1

Scopus
Fueling Research, Driving Innovation
Scopus
• Introduction
• What is Scopus ?
• Why do you need Scopus?
• Why do our customers use Scopus?
What is Scopus ?
What is Scopus?
•Launch time Nov 2004
• World’s largest multi-disciplinary
abstract and citation database
• Peer-reviewed research literature and
quality web & patent sources
• Smart tools to track, analyse and
visualize research
Scopus Content
• 17500+ peer-reviewed journals across multiple disciplines
from 5,000+ publishers, including:
• 1,800 Open Access journals
• Archive (back to 1823)
• Articles in Press
• 340 Book Series
• 400 Trade Publications
• 520 Conference Proceedings
• Content Selection & Advisory Board
• 47 million records, of which ( 70 % with Abstract)
• 26 million include references going back to 1996
• 21 million pre-1996 go back to 1823
• 315 million scientific websites, including 25 million patents (Scirus)
• Complete title list: http://www.info.scopus.com/detail/what/
Article in press
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3850 journals are provided
Cambridge
Elsevier
Springer
Karger medical and scientific pub
Nature pub grup
IEEE
BioMed Central(BMC)
LWW
Further AiP in sep 2010
Thieme
BMj
World Scientific
American Association for the advancement of science
Scopus = development in partnership
Designed by users for users
Scopus partners with organizations to improve
design and functionality
“User centered, librarian approved”
– Amy Knapp, Pittsburgh
Benefits
• Intuitive interface
• Powerful “Refine Results Box”
• Seamless linking to Full Text
• Ability to analyse research output
- Author and Affiliation profiles
- Citation Tracker
- Journal Analyzer
Why do you need Scopus ?
You need Scopus to…
• Find articles in familiar subject fields
• Investigate a new area of interest
• Find key opinion leaders
• Find potential collaboration partners
• Monitor activities of competitors
• Stay up-to-date with research trends
Challenges Faced by the Research Community
1. Identify all relevant information
2. Find the information effectively
3. Evaluate research output
4. Measure performance
5. Monitor trends
 How does Scopus help to overcome
these challenges?
Scopus is Designed to Facilitate Major Research
Tasks
• Find articles on a specific topic
• Get an overview of a subject area
• Stay up-to-date
Literature
Research
• Find author-related information
- Articles by a specific author, co-authors, citations
- Information to help evaluate an author
• Get detailed citation information and reports
Research
• H-index
Evaluation
SCOPUS
WEB OF SCIENCE
# of Records
47 million
87 million
# of Journals indexed
17500
23000
Dates of Coverage
1869 to present (only continuously
from 1996)
1900 to present (backfiles purchased
separately for one-time fee)
“Other” Content
Conference proceedings, book series,
patents, IR, web pages, articles in
press, MEDLINE
Conference proceedings
Update Frequency
daily
daily
Alert Services
RSS, email
RSS, email
Bib Management Support
RefWorks, EndNote, BibTex (all sold
separately)
EndNote Web (included), ProCite,
Reference Manager
References Included?
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Y
Coverage: pre 1996
Results Page – Refine Results
Author Search: Mario R. Capecchi
Author Results
Author Details Page
Affiliation Search: Basilea
Affiliation Results
Affiliation Details
What’s New @ Scopus?
Affiliation Identifier
h-index calculator
Journal Analyzer
Document and Author
Citation Alerts
Scivers Applications
PMID--------Pubmed
What is the h-Index?
• Performance measurement tool for scientific authors
(similar idea to journal impact factors but for individuals)
• Established by Jorge Hirsch at UC San Diego
“A scientist has index h if h of his/her Np papers have
at least h citations each, and the other (Np- h) papers
have no more than h citations each.”
Source: Hirsch, J. E. (2005, September 29). An index to quantify an individual’s scientific research
output. Retrieved from http://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0508025
h-Index in Author Details Page
Evaluate h-index & citation
tracker with one click
h-Index in Citation Report
Authors can exclude self
citations here
The h-index rating with
option to obtain graph
h-Index Graph
• Qualifies the impact and quality of
research output for:
• Individual scientist’s
• Journals
• Research projects
• Entire research groups
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Plots citations per article
Incision = h-index
Shows low & highly cited-by counts
Completely transparent
Date range can be changed
Practical Interpretation:
Promotion, Evaluation, Funding,
Tenure, Benchmarking
h-Index Benefits
• Researchers can readily export h-Index for grant and funding
applications
• Administrators/Heads of faculty can use the index as a
useful means to evaluate the performance of an individual (for
tenure and promotions) or their team as a whole
• Grant and funding bodies can run simultaneous
comparisons of research groups
• Journal editors can track the impact of their journals’ output
with unrivalled convenience and accuracy
SNIP (Source Normalized Impact per Paper)
• SNIP measures a source’s contextual citation impact by weighting
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citations based on the total number of citations in a subject field. It helps
you make a direct comparison of sources in different subject fields.
SNIP takes into account characteristics of the source's subject field,
which is the set of documents citing that source. SNIP especially
considers
the frequency at which authors cite other papers in their reference lists
the speed at which citation impact matures
the extent to which the database used in the assessment covers the
field’s literature
SJR (SCImago Journal Rank)
• SJR is weighted by the prestige of a journal Subject field, quality, and
reputation of the journal have a direct effect on the value of a citation.
• SJR assigns relative scores to all of the sources in a citation network. Its
methodology is inspired by the Google PageRank algorithm, in that not
all citations are equal. A source transfers its own 'prestige', or status, to
another source through the act of citing it. A citation from a source with a
relatively high SJR is worth more than a citation from a source with a
lower SJR.
New! Journal Analyzer Tool
A Journal Evaluation Tool:
• Gives users a comparative overview of the journal
landscape, showing how titles in a given field are performing
relative to each other
• Objective data is presented in an easy, comprehensive
graphical format comparing citations of max. 10 journals from
over 15,000 peer reviewed journals from today all the way back
to 1996
• Data is updated bi-monthly to ensure currency
What does it look like?
Compare up to 10 journals by total
citations and number of articles published
Alerts In scopus
• Document Citation Alert
• Search Alert
• Author Citation Alert
•Any Questions?