News Release

CiteScore™ releases 2016 annual values and updates

Business Announcement

Elsevier

Elsevier, a global information analytics company specializing in science and health, today releases CiteScore 2016 annual values and a number of improvements to its set of simple, reproducible serial metrics that cover all journals, book series, conference proceedings and trade publications in Scopus.

From today, CiteScore metrics now include 2016 annual values. There are eight indicators that are part of CiteScore metrics, including CiteScore Tracker, which enables users to monitor progress on a monthly basis, eliminating the need to wait until mid-year to see how a title performed in the previous year.

A number of improvements have been made to CiteScore metrics based on user feedback. Most significantly, complete transparency has been added to the metrics so that users can validate any CiteScore value by clicking into the numerator (citations) and denominator (documents) to view the underlying documents used for the calculation. Scopus subscribers and non-subscribers are able to access CiteScore metrics and their underlying data. Scopus is the largest abstract and citation database of peer-reviewed literature: scientific journals, books, conference proceedings and trade publications.

"Since its release, we've seen other publishers start to adopt CiteScore. Like them, CiteScore allows my team to monitor our journal's performance throughout the year, lessening the need to wait until mid-year to see how a journal performed the prior year. No debate is required about the underlying numbers: the number of citations and the number of articles are transparent numbers. Good things are sometimes simple. Journal metrics are important for our authors when they consider submitting an article. We continue to advocate using journal metrics only for the assessment of journals - not individual researchers," said Philippe Terheggen, Elsevier's Managing Director of Science, Technical and Medical Journals.

CiteScore metrics were launched in December 2016 in response to academia's call for metrics that provide a broader, more transparent view of an academic journal's citation impact. CiteScore metrics are part of a basket of metrics available on Scopus (including journal, author, institutional, and article-level metrics), supporting a holistic view of research performance.

CiteScore metrics have been developed as a tool to help researchers in deciding where to publish, what to read and with whom to collaborate; for librarians and information specialists in managing their collections and enriching researcher services around metrics; for institutional leaders in showcasing the research being published and evaluating research strategy; and for publishers in measuring the performance of their titles and portfolios.

CiteScore metrics are comprehensive, current, transparent and free:

  • Comprehensive: CiteScore 2016 is available for 22,600+ active titles indexed by Scopus. CiteScore is available for all types of active serial titles on Scopus - peer-reviewed journals, book series, conference proceedings and trade publications, in 330 disciplines.

  • Current: CiteScore Tracker allows you to track how the current year's CiteScore is building each month, giving a good indication of what the following year's value will be thus eliminating the need to wait until mid-year to see how a title performed last year.

  • Transparent: CiteScore now gives complete transparency into the underlying data by allowing users (regardless of whether you have a Scopus subscription) to click into the numerator (citations) and denominator (documents). Simple to replicate, the calculations for CiteScore is straightforward, with no secret algorithms or hidden details to influence results.

  • Free: CiteScore metrics, including access to the underlying data, continue to be free to access without a Scopus subscription in the following ways:

    o The journal metrics website: search and filter features let you explore the full range of CiteScore metrics for a group of titles (such as open access journals), a subject category or a publisher view.

    o Search for titles on Scopus and access individual source profile pages.

    o Journal homepages on Elsevier.com: access CiteScore metrics for more than 2,500 journals and book series published by Elsevier.

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