Inter-Research > ESEP > pp9  
ESEP
Ethics in Science and Environmental Politics

via Mailchimp

ESEP 8:pp9 (2008)  -   doi: 10.3354/esep00090

THEME SECTION
Re-interpretation of ‘influence weight’ as a citation-based Index of New Knowledge (INK)

D. Pauly1,*, K. I. Stergiou2

1Fisheries Center, University of British Columbia, 2202 Main Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z4, Canada
2Department of Zoology, School of Biology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, PO Box 134, 54124 Thessaloniki, Greece

ABSTRACT: A method proposed in 1976 by F. Narin and collaborators for assessing the ‘influence weight’ of journals is re-interpreted as a potential citation-based indicator of the impact of scientific and other publications which would allow for comparisons between publication types (e.g. regular articles, notes, books) and disciplines, whose practitioners typically exhibit radically different citation behaviors. This Index of New Knowledge (INK) is a dimensionless fraction, with the number of references in the paper to be evaluated + 1 as the denominator, and the number of citations accumulated during a certain period after publication as the numerator. Application examples are provided, covering different disciplines, and the pros and cons of INK are discussed and contrasted with the widely-used journal impact factor.


KEY WORDS: Impact factor · Citedness · Genetics · Comparison between disciplines


Full text in pdf format  |  Mail this link



ESEP THEME SECTION: The use and misuse of bibliometric indices in evaluating scholarly performance