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Beyond the Durfee square: enhancing the h-index to score total publication output

TLDR
It is argued that the hT-index is superior to h, both theoretically (it scores all citations), and because it shows smooth increases from year to year as compared with the irregular jumps seen in h.
Abstract
An individual’s h-index corresponds to the number h of his/her papers that each has at least h citations. When the citation count of an article exceeds h, however, as is the case for the hundreds or even thousands of citations that accompany the most highly cited papers, no additional credit is given (these citations falling outside the so-called “Durfee square”). We propose a new bibliometric index, the “tapered h-index” (hT), that positively enumerates all citations, yet scoring them on an equitable basis with h. The career progression of hT and h are compared for six eminent scientists in contrasting fields. Calculated hT for year 2006 ranged between 44.32 and 72.03, with a corresponding range in h of 26 to 44. We argue that the hT-index is superior to h, both theoretically (it scores all citations), and because it shows smooth increases from year to year as compared with the irregular jumps seen in h. Conversely, the original h-index has the benefit of being conceptually easy to visualise. Qualitatively, the two indices show remarkable similarity (they are closely correlated), such that either can be applied with confidence.

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Journal ArticleDOI

h-Index: A review focused in its variants, computation and standardization for different scientific fields

TL;DR: This contribution presents a comprehensive review on the h-index and related indicators field, studying their main advantages, drawbacks and the main applications that can be found in the literature.
Journal ArticleDOI

An index to quantify an individual's scientific research output that takes into account the effect of multiple coauthorship

TL;DR: The index hbar, defined as the number of papers of an individual that have citation count larger than or equal to the citation count of all coauthors of each paper, is proposed as a useful index to characterize the scientific output of a researcher that takes into account the effect of multiple authorship.
Journal ArticleDOI

A multilevel meta-analysis of studies reporting correlations between the h index and 37 different h index variants

TL;DR: The results of a three-level cross-classified mixed-effects meta-analysis show a high correlation between the h index and its variants: Depending on the model, the mean correlation coefficient varies between .8 and .9, which means that there is redundancy between most of the hIndex variants and the h Index.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comparison of bibliometric indicators for computer science scholars and journals on Web of Science and Google Scholar

TL;DR: The study concludes that Google scholar computes significantly higher indicators’ scores than Web of Science, and citation-based rankings of both scholars and journals do not significantly change when compiled on the two data sources, while rankings based on the h index show a moderate degree of variation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An index to quantify an individual's scientific research output

TL;DR: The index h, defined as the number of papers with citation number ≥h, is proposed as a useful index to characterize the scientific output of a researcher.
Book

The theory of partitions

TL;DR: The elementary theory of partitions and partitions in combinatorics can be found in this article, where the Hardy-Ramanujan-Rademacher expansion of p(n) is considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Theory and practise of the g-index

TL;DR: It is shown that the g-index inherits all the good properties of the h-index and better takes into account the citation scores of the top articles and yields a better distinction between and order of the scientists from the point of view of visibility.
Book ChapterDOI

The Theory of Partitions

TL;DR: The generating functions which occur in the theory of partitions and functions closely related to them belong to two important classes of functions, namely the theta functions and the modular functions, both of which have received much attention and have been most thoroughly investigated since the time of Jacobi.
Journal ArticleDOI

The skewness of science

TL;DR: The skewness in the citedness distribution of each author's articles, the large overlap between different authors and the existence of field‐dependent systematic differences in citedness would seem to make even article citations unsuitable for evaluation of individual scientists or research groups.
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