Title of article
The h-index: A case of the tail wagging the dog?
Author/Authors
Burrell، نويسنده , , Quentin L.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
10
From page
774
To page
783
Abstract
From the way that it was initially defined (Hirsch, 2005), the h-index naturally encourages focus on the most highly cited publications of an author and this in turn has led to (predominantly) a rank-based approach to its investigation. However, Hirsch (2005) and Burrell (2007a) both adopted a frequency-based approach leading to general conjectures regarding the relationship between the h-index and the authorʹs publication and citation rates as well as his/her career length. Here we apply the distributional results of Burrell (2007a, 2013b) to three published data sets to show that a good estimate of the h-index can often be obtained knowing only the number of publications and the number of citations. (Exceptions can occur when an author has one or more “outliers” in the upper tail of the citation distribution.) In other words, maybe the main body of the distribution determines the h-index, not the wild wagging of the tail. Furthermore, the simple geometric distribution turns out to be the key.
Keywords
Citation distribution , Publication-citation process , Geometric distribution , non-linear equations , Quasi h-index , h-Index profile
Journal title
Journal of Informetrics
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Journal of Informetrics
Record number
1387581
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