Research Impact Metrics
A guide for those wanting to use research impact metrics for evaluation, analytics, and reviews, e.g., promotion & tenure.
- Home
- Publication Counts
- Journal Metrics
- Author Metrics & h-index
- Bibliometrics / Citations
- Altmetrics
- Usage Statistics
- Responsible Research Assessment
- Qualitative Evaluation
- Researcher Profiles This link opens in a new window
- Individual Impact & Engagement This link opens in a new window
- Research Impact & Intelligence Department This link opens in a new window
Research Impact Coordinator
Metrics Toolkit
- Metrics ToolkitThe Metrics Toolkit provides evidence-based information about research metrics across disciplines, including how each metric is calculated, where you can find it, and how each should (and should not) be applied. You’ll also find examples of how to use metrics in grant applications, CVs, and promotion dossiers.
An Overview of Metrics
Research impact indicators can be quantitative or qualitative. However, research impact metrics are quantitative and are diverse. Examples include citation-based metrics, such as citation counts, the h-index, the Journal Impact Factor, and normalized citation metrics, such as the Field-Weighted Citation Impact from Scopus. Normalized metrics allow you to compare citation impact across disciplines or fields, document type, and publication year.
- Last Updated: Jan 12, 2024 5:14 PM
- URL: https://guides.lib.vt.edu/research-metrics
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