This document provides guidance on selecting an appropriate journal to publish research. It discusses factors to consider like the paper's content, intended audience, and journal scope. It also covers differences between indexed and non-indexed journals, as well as open access and subscription models. Metrics for evaluating journals are defined, including impact factor, eigenfactor, h-index, and quartiles. The differences between Scopus and Web of Science databases are outlined. Tools for preliminary journal searches like Ulrich's and journal finder databases are recommended. The presentation emphasizes understanding journal metrics and selection criteria before submitting to ensure matching research with a suitable publication outlet.
This document provides an overview of citation indexing and describes some key tools and concepts. Citation indexing traces the use of ideas across research by identifying papers that cite older publications. The Institute for Scientific Information pioneered citation indexing databases like the Web of Science. While comprehensive, the WoS has limitations in coverage of non-English language and developing world journals. The Indian Citation Index was created to index more Indian publications and support research evaluation in India. Impact factors are calculated based on citations in the Journal Citation Reports to measure journal influence.
This document summarizes a virtual workshop on thesis writing and publication organized by Lavender Literacy Club and Cape Comorin Trust in collaboration with other institutions. It discusses research metrics, which are quantitative measures used to assess scholarly research outputs and impacts. Various metrics are explained, including journal metrics like impact factor, author metrics like h-index, and alternative metrics. The importance of research profiles, publishing ethics, and increasing research visibility and impacts are also covered.
The document discusses various topics related to scientometrics including bibliometrics, informetrics, cybermetrics, scientometrics, altmetrics, and scientometric tools. It provides definitions and examples of each topic. For scientometric tools, it mentions citation mapping, visualization, bibliographic coupling, co-authorship networks, and co-word mapping. It also discusses the h-index and impact factor as important metrics for measuring research.
This document provides information on how to check the indexing of publications in various databases. It begins by defining publishers, scientific journals, and the differences between SCI, SCIE, and ESCI indexed journals. It then explains how to check if a journal is indexed on the Web of Science, Scopus, or Google Scholar platforms. The document also discusses characteristics of good publications, including structure, reviewing process, and increasing citations. Overall, the document offers guidance on publishing research and verifying the indexing status of journals.
Citation indexes and impact factors are important measures for research. Citation indexes allow researchers to find the impact of articles on later publications and identify the latest areas of research. The impact factor of a journal is calculated based on the average number of citations received by articles published in that journal in the past two years. It is used to measure the importance and rank of journals. Other measures like the h-index, eigenfactor, and z-influence can also provide insights into the influence and quality of published work. Citation analysis using these metrics helps evaluate the impact of authors, journals, and research.
This slide aims to help and guide students on how to start finding literature review through WOS and SCOPUS. The content is excerpted from various sources available from the internet. This is solely meant for education purpose.
This document provides an overview of bibliometrics and discusses various bibliometric indicators and tools. It describes what bibliometrics is, why it is used, and different bibliometric indicators like the impact factor, h-index, SNIP, SJR, and altmetrics. It discusses bibliometric data sources like Web of Science, Scopus, Google Scholar, and provides pros and cons of each. The document concludes that no single metric can provide a complete picture and that metrics should be used to improve research assessment rather than rely on a single number or tool.
This document provides guidance on selecting an appropriate journal to publish research. It discusses factors to consider like the paper's content, intended audience, and journal scope. It also covers differences between indexed and non-indexed journals, as well as open access and subscription models. Metrics for evaluating journals are defined, including impact factor, eigenfactor, h-index, and quartiles. The differences between Scopus and Web of Science databases are outlined. Tools for preliminary journal searches like Ulrich's and journal finder databases are recommended. The presentation emphasizes understanding journal metrics and selection criteria before submitting to ensure matching research with a suitable publication outlet.
This document provides an overview of citation indexing and describes some key tools and concepts. Citation indexing traces the use of ideas across research by identifying papers that cite older publications. The Institute for Scientific Information pioneered citation indexing databases like the Web of Science. While comprehensive, the WoS has limitations in coverage of non-English language and developing world journals. The Indian Citation Index was created to index more Indian publications and support research evaluation in India. Impact factors are calculated based on citations in the Journal Citation Reports to measure journal influence.
This document summarizes a virtual workshop on thesis writing and publication organized by Lavender Literacy Club and Cape Comorin Trust in collaboration with other institutions. It discusses research metrics, which are quantitative measures used to assess scholarly research outputs and impacts. Various metrics are explained, including journal metrics like impact factor, author metrics like h-index, and alternative metrics. The importance of research profiles, publishing ethics, and increasing research visibility and impacts are also covered.
The document discusses various topics related to scientometrics including bibliometrics, informetrics, cybermetrics, scientometrics, altmetrics, and scientometric tools. It provides definitions and examples of each topic. For scientometric tools, it mentions citation mapping, visualization, bibliographic coupling, co-authorship networks, and co-word mapping. It also discusses the h-index and impact factor as important metrics for measuring research.
This document provides information on how to check the indexing of publications in various databases. It begins by defining publishers, scientific journals, and the differences between SCI, SCIE, and ESCI indexed journals. It then explains how to check if a journal is indexed on the Web of Science, Scopus, or Google Scholar platforms. The document also discusses characteristics of good publications, including structure, reviewing process, and increasing citations. Overall, the document offers guidance on publishing research and verifying the indexing status of journals.
Citation indexes and impact factors are important measures for research. Citation indexes allow researchers to find the impact of articles on later publications and identify the latest areas of research. The impact factor of a journal is calculated based on the average number of citations received by articles published in that journal in the past two years. It is used to measure the importance and rank of journals. Other measures like the h-index, eigenfactor, and z-influence can also provide insights into the influence and quality of published work. Citation analysis using these metrics helps evaluate the impact of authors, journals, and research.
This slide aims to help and guide students on how to start finding literature review through WOS and SCOPUS. The content is excerpted from various sources available from the internet. This is solely meant for education purpose.
This document provides an overview of bibliometrics and discusses various bibliometric indicators and tools. It describes what bibliometrics is, why it is used, and different bibliometric indicators like the impact factor, h-index, SNIP, SJR, and altmetrics. It discusses bibliometric data sources like Web of Science, Scopus, Google Scholar, and provides pros and cons of each. The document concludes that no single metric can provide a complete picture and that metrics should be used to improve research assessment rather than rely on a single number or tool.
The document discusses various citation databases and research metrics used to evaluate scholarly publications and researchers. It describes major citation databases like Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar that compile citations from bibliographies. It also explains common research metrics like the Impact Factor, h-index, g-index, i10 Index, Cite Score, SJR, and SNIP used to measure the influence and impact of publications and researchers. These metrics are calculated based on factors like the number of citations a publication or researcher receives.
How to prepare a research paper and its evaluation toolsMohanapriya Suresh
This document provides guidance on preparing and structuring a research paper, including:
1. The general structure of a full research paper includes sections like the title, abstract, introduction, methods, results, discussion, and references.
2. Key elements that should be addressed in each section are described, such as keeping the title concise but informative, summarizing key findings in the abstract, and clearly explaining methodology.
3. Various tools for evaluating research impact are discussed, including journal indexing in databases like Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar as well as metrics like the h-index, g-index, and i10-index that measure citations and author productivity. Proper formatting of references
This document discusses research metrics and how they are used to measure the impact and influence of scientific research. It defines several types of metrics including journal impact factors, author metrics, article metrics, and altmetrics. It also explains how impact factors are calculated for journals and describes other measures like the h-index, SNIP, and IPP that provide additional ways to evaluate research outputs and impacts. Scopus and the Web of Science are identified as databases used to find citation counts and metrics.
Research metrics are quantitative analyses used to assess the quality, impact, and influence of scholarly research outputs. Key metrics include journal impact factors, author metrics, article metrics, and altmetrics. Journal impact factors are calculated based on the number of citations a journal's articles receive. Author metrics measure researcher impact and productivity. Article metrics track citations of individual works. Altmetrics provide broader measures of online attention and impact.
Presentation of thomson reuters and web of science in publishingPadmanabhan Krishnan
1) The document discusses various tools for scientific research including Web of Science, EndNote, Journal Citation Reports, and ResearcherID. It focuses on how to search literature efficiently and discover relevant information.
2) Dynamics of scholarly information are reviewed, with Web of Science presented as an integrated solution for literature search, analysis, writing and publishing papers. It allows searching cited references, times cited and related records.
3) Personal tools like EndNote Web and ResearcherID are presented as ways to manage references and build a profile to showcase publications and collaboration opportunities. Metrics like impact factors, citation counts and H-indexes are discussed to evaluate journals and researchers.
Introduction to research and its different aspectsbarsharoy19
This slide introduces the basic aspects of a research paper. It gives a brief description on impact factor, citation index and different categories of research paper
Identifying and understanding research impact:
A comprehensive suite of metrics embedded throughout Scopus is designed to help facilitate evaluation and provide a better view of your research interests. Whether you are looking for metrics at the journal, article or author level, Scopus combines its sophisticated analytical capabilities with its unbiased and broad content coverage to help you build valuable insights.
Here we look at:
Author level metrics
Journal metrics
Article level metrics
The document discusses various academic metrics used to measure the impact and quality of scholarly work, including journals, authors, and institutions. It defines ISSN numbers, journal finders, DOIs, SJR, impact factors, indexing services, and Google Scholar metrics. It explains how to calculate the h-index, i10-index, and g-index for authors. It distinguishes between reference lists and bibliographies and discusses various referencing styles. It provides examples of citations in the Vancouver referencing style. The document is intended as a guide to help understand different methods used to evaluate academic work.
This document provides an overview of various bibliometric tools and metrics for measuring scientific output and impact. It discusses journal ranking metrics like impact factor, eigenfactor, SNIP, and SJR. It also covers article-level metrics including F1000 factors and citation analysis tools from Google Scholar, Web of Science, and Scopus. Additionally, it introduces author-level metrics such as the h-index and its variants that can be calculated using various databases and tools. Finally, the document briefly discusses altmetrics and ways to track scholarly impact on social media and the open web.
This document discusses various ways to maximize the impact of scholarly research publications. It covers journal impact metrics like the impact factor, h-index, and altmetrics. It also discusses open access publishing options like institutional repositories, gold open access journals, and article processing charges. Strategies suggested for maximizing impact include co-publishing internationally, targeting high impact journals, setting up profiles on Google Scholar and ORCID, and utilizing social media and repositories to promote publications.
Open Access and IR along with Quality Indicators.pptxManiMaran230751
This document discusses open access and institutional repositories. It begins by outlining the traditional scholarly publishing process and some of the motivations for scholars to publish their work. It then defines open access as free online access to scholarly works, along with the ability to legally share and reuse those works. The document describes the two main types of open access - green open access through institutional repositories, and gold open access through fully open access journals. It also discusses various publication metrics used to measure journal quality, individual article and researcher quality, such as the journal impact factor, h-index, and g-index. Overall, the document provides an overview of open access models and debates around common bibliometric indicators.
Showcasing your Research Impact using BibliometricsCiarán Quinn
This document provides an introduction to bibliometrics and altmetrics. It discusses what bibliometrics are and why they are important. It outlines several metrics used to measure research impact, including total citations, h-index, and variations. The document recommends tools for identifying your own citation metrics and potential collaborators. Finally, it notes that bibliometrics only indicate impact and not quality, and should be used alongside other evaluation methods.
Durham Researcher Development Programme 2015-16: Bibliometric Research Indica...Jamie Bisset
There is an ever-increasing need to make your research more visible as you establish your career, and metrics to measure your research performance when it comes to thinking about promotion and probation.
This session will focus on bibliometric research indicators (such as the Journal Impact Factor and SCImago, author metrics such as the h-index and g-index) and sources for accessing citation data (Web of Science, Journal Citation Reports and Google Scholar). These may be one of several factors to consider when thinking about where to submit an article manuscript for publication to maximise the potential academic impact of the research, and tools useful to be familiar with if they form part of any research evaluation you and your authored journal papers may be subject to.
An additional section will also look at tips to consider when writing an article abstract to maximise its discoverability and cite-ability.
Learning Outcomes:
• Understanding of meaning and intended uses of bibliometric research indicators
• Understanding of how some key indicators (JIF, H-index) are calculated
• Ability to make a judgement as to the appropriateness and limitations of such indicators
• Ability to use online datasets to view and calculate key bibliometric measures
• Awareness of some factors which can increase the visibility and discoverability of your own research in bibliographic databases.
Previous participants have said:
"The session has helped provide me with the basic information on Journal Impact and where to find information such as an author's h-index. It will be useful for future journal submission consideration."
"This session was very useful for me to become familiar with the topic."
The presentation deals with variety of tips concerning indexing and citations metrics. These tips will serve as a guideline for researchers for pursuing further research. The main purpose of the presentation is to provide a brief introduction about the indexing metrics. Moreover, it will address the importance of citations, h-index, and how to calculate the h-index for a particular scholar. Furthermore, it will briefly describe how to find an appropriate indexed journal for a specific research article. Eventually, it will concisely demonstrate how to promote a particular research paper across different channels of social media.
Quality Assurance for Journal GuidanceSmriti Arora
Definitions
What is the need for quality assurance in journals ?
Type of journals
Bibliometric indicators
How to identify credible journals ?
Predatory/cloned journals
Scholarly writing and publishing research articlesDR.R.SASIPRIYA
This document discusses scholarly writing and publishing research articles. It provides information on the importance of research, quality of good research, types of research articles, guidelines for article writing, and content of a research paper. It also discusses topics like titles, abstracts, keywords, impact factors, indexing, citations, citation styles, and popular citation sites. The key points are:
1) Research is important for knowledge, innovation, advancement and technology. Good research is systematic, logical, empirical and replicable with a result orientation.
2) Research articles can be analytical papers, conceptual papers or case studies. They should follow guidelines for formatting, structure, and length.
3) Important parts of a research paper include the
In the competitive landscape of academia, the visibility of your research is crucial. It not only reflects the impact of your work but also contributes to the advancement of your career
1) Citation metrics have evolved over time from bibliometrics in the 1960s to more recent metrics like altmetrics and webometrics. They are used to assess the influence of published research.
2) Key citation metrics include the journal impact factor, h-index, and article-level metrics like citation counts and altmetrics. Data sources include Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar.
3) Citation indexing links cited and citing articles, allowing researchers to trace the development of ideas over time. Citation analysis helps understand why authors cite other works.
Identifying journals for publication youtubeDr. Chinchu C
The presentation is about how to be careful while selecting academic journals for publication.
Malayalam YouTube video based on this presentation is available at https://youtu.be/z5_LD7qqzbw
Content:
When to start searching for journals
General and Specialized Journals
Acceptance Rates
Journal Selection Tools
Journal Indexing
Web of Science
Scopus
Medline, PubMed, and PubMed Central
UGC CARE
Journal Metrics
Impact Factor
CiteScore
Checklist for Journal Selection
Predatory Journals
Cloned/Hijacked Journals
Some Useful Places
chapter 1 introduction to scientific writingdedy hartama
Publishing research papers in international journals is important for career progression and gaining recognition. There are thousands of academic journals that follow basic publishing standards. The Institute for Scientific Information (ISI) and Scopus are important databases for indexing journals. Good writing requires planning content before focusing on language elements. Strong writing involves outlining ideas and rewriting drafts substantially.
The document outlines the rules for a quiz where each group will be asked one question and can earn 10 points for a correct answer but lose 5 points for an incorrect answer. The question cannot be passed to another group. It then lists various people, companies, and products but does not provide any context around them.
The document discusses various citation databases and research metrics used to evaluate scholarly publications and researchers. It describes major citation databases like Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar that compile citations from bibliographies. It also explains common research metrics like the Impact Factor, h-index, g-index, i10 Index, Cite Score, SJR, and SNIP used to measure the influence and impact of publications and researchers. These metrics are calculated based on factors like the number of citations a publication or researcher receives.
How to prepare a research paper and its evaluation toolsMohanapriya Suresh
This document provides guidance on preparing and structuring a research paper, including:
1. The general structure of a full research paper includes sections like the title, abstract, introduction, methods, results, discussion, and references.
2. Key elements that should be addressed in each section are described, such as keeping the title concise but informative, summarizing key findings in the abstract, and clearly explaining methodology.
3. Various tools for evaluating research impact are discussed, including journal indexing in databases like Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar as well as metrics like the h-index, g-index, and i10-index that measure citations and author productivity. Proper formatting of references
This document discusses research metrics and how they are used to measure the impact and influence of scientific research. It defines several types of metrics including journal impact factors, author metrics, article metrics, and altmetrics. It also explains how impact factors are calculated for journals and describes other measures like the h-index, SNIP, and IPP that provide additional ways to evaluate research outputs and impacts. Scopus and the Web of Science are identified as databases used to find citation counts and metrics.
Research metrics are quantitative analyses used to assess the quality, impact, and influence of scholarly research outputs. Key metrics include journal impact factors, author metrics, article metrics, and altmetrics. Journal impact factors are calculated based on the number of citations a journal's articles receive. Author metrics measure researcher impact and productivity. Article metrics track citations of individual works. Altmetrics provide broader measures of online attention and impact.
Presentation of thomson reuters and web of science in publishingPadmanabhan Krishnan
1) The document discusses various tools for scientific research including Web of Science, EndNote, Journal Citation Reports, and ResearcherID. It focuses on how to search literature efficiently and discover relevant information.
2) Dynamics of scholarly information are reviewed, with Web of Science presented as an integrated solution for literature search, analysis, writing and publishing papers. It allows searching cited references, times cited and related records.
3) Personal tools like EndNote Web and ResearcherID are presented as ways to manage references and build a profile to showcase publications and collaboration opportunities. Metrics like impact factors, citation counts and H-indexes are discussed to evaluate journals and researchers.
Introduction to research and its different aspectsbarsharoy19
This slide introduces the basic aspects of a research paper. It gives a brief description on impact factor, citation index and different categories of research paper
Identifying and understanding research impact:
A comprehensive suite of metrics embedded throughout Scopus is designed to help facilitate evaluation and provide a better view of your research interests. Whether you are looking for metrics at the journal, article or author level, Scopus combines its sophisticated analytical capabilities with its unbiased and broad content coverage to help you build valuable insights.
Here we look at:
Author level metrics
Journal metrics
Article level metrics
The document discusses various academic metrics used to measure the impact and quality of scholarly work, including journals, authors, and institutions. It defines ISSN numbers, journal finders, DOIs, SJR, impact factors, indexing services, and Google Scholar metrics. It explains how to calculate the h-index, i10-index, and g-index for authors. It distinguishes between reference lists and bibliographies and discusses various referencing styles. It provides examples of citations in the Vancouver referencing style. The document is intended as a guide to help understand different methods used to evaluate academic work.
This document provides an overview of various bibliometric tools and metrics for measuring scientific output and impact. It discusses journal ranking metrics like impact factor, eigenfactor, SNIP, and SJR. It also covers article-level metrics including F1000 factors and citation analysis tools from Google Scholar, Web of Science, and Scopus. Additionally, it introduces author-level metrics such as the h-index and its variants that can be calculated using various databases and tools. Finally, the document briefly discusses altmetrics and ways to track scholarly impact on social media and the open web.
This document discusses various ways to maximize the impact of scholarly research publications. It covers journal impact metrics like the impact factor, h-index, and altmetrics. It also discusses open access publishing options like institutional repositories, gold open access journals, and article processing charges. Strategies suggested for maximizing impact include co-publishing internationally, targeting high impact journals, setting up profiles on Google Scholar and ORCID, and utilizing social media and repositories to promote publications.
Open Access and IR along with Quality Indicators.pptxManiMaran230751
This document discusses open access and institutional repositories. It begins by outlining the traditional scholarly publishing process and some of the motivations for scholars to publish their work. It then defines open access as free online access to scholarly works, along with the ability to legally share and reuse those works. The document describes the two main types of open access - green open access through institutional repositories, and gold open access through fully open access journals. It also discusses various publication metrics used to measure journal quality, individual article and researcher quality, such as the journal impact factor, h-index, and g-index. Overall, the document provides an overview of open access models and debates around common bibliometric indicators.
Showcasing your Research Impact using BibliometricsCiarán Quinn
This document provides an introduction to bibliometrics and altmetrics. It discusses what bibliometrics are and why they are important. It outlines several metrics used to measure research impact, including total citations, h-index, and variations. The document recommends tools for identifying your own citation metrics and potential collaborators. Finally, it notes that bibliometrics only indicate impact and not quality, and should be used alongside other evaluation methods.
Durham Researcher Development Programme 2015-16: Bibliometric Research Indica...Jamie Bisset
There is an ever-increasing need to make your research more visible as you establish your career, and metrics to measure your research performance when it comes to thinking about promotion and probation.
This session will focus on bibliometric research indicators (such as the Journal Impact Factor and SCImago, author metrics such as the h-index and g-index) and sources for accessing citation data (Web of Science, Journal Citation Reports and Google Scholar). These may be one of several factors to consider when thinking about where to submit an article manuscript for publication to maximise the potential academic impact of the research, and tools useful to be familiar with if they form part of any research evaluation you and your authored journal papers may be subject to.
An additional section will also look at tips to consider when writing an article abstract to maximise its discoverability and cite-ability.
Learning Outcomes:
• Understanding of meaning and intended uses of bibliometric research indicators
• Understanding of how some key indicators (JIF, H-index) are calculated
• Ability to make a judgement as to the appropriateness and limitations of such indicators
• Ability to use online datasets to view and calculate key bibliometric measures
• Awareness of some factors which can increase the visibility and discoverability of your own research in bibliographic databases.
Previous participants have said:
"The session has helped provide me with the basic information on Journal Impact and where to find information such as an author's h-index. It will be useful for future journal submission consideration."
"This session was very useful for me to become familiar with the topic."
The presentation deals with variety of tips concerning indexing and citations metrics. These tips will serve as a guideline for researchers for pursuing further research. The main purpose of the presentation is to provide a brief introduction about the indexing metrics. Moreover, it will address the importance of citations, h-index, and how to calculate the h-index for a particular scholar. Furthermore, it will briefly describe how to find an appropriate indexed journal for a specific research article. Eventually, it will concisely demonstrate how to promote a particular research paper across different channels of social media.
Quality Assurance for Journal GuidanceSmriti Arora
Definitions
What is the need for quality assurance in journals ?
Type of journals
Bibliometric indicators
How to identify credible journals ?
Predatory/cloned journals
Scholarly writing and publishing research articlesDR.R.SASIPRIYA
This document discusses scholarly writing and publishing research articles. It provides information on the importance of research, quality of good research, types of research articles, guidelines for article writing, and content of a research paper. It also discusses topics like titles, abstracts, keywords, impact factors, indexing, citations, citation styles, and popular citation sites. The key points are:
1) Research is important for knowledge, innovation, advancement and technology. Good research is systematic, logical, empirical and replicable with a result orientation.
2) Research articles can be analytical papers, conceptual papers or case studies. They should follow guidelines for formatting, structure, and length.
3) Important parts of a research paper include the
In the competitive landscape of academia, the visibility of your research is crucial. It not only reflects the impact of your work but also contributes to the advancement of your career
1) Citation metrics have evolved over time from bibliometrics in the 1960s to more recent metrics like altmetrics and webometrics. They are used to assess the influence of published research.
2) Key citation metrics include the journal impact factor, h-index, and article-level metrics like citation counts and altmetrics. Data sources include Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar.
3) Citation indexing links cited and citing articles, allowing researchers to trace the development of ideas over time. Citation analysis helps understand why authors cite other works.
Identifying journals for publication youtubeDr. Chinchu C
The presentation is about how to be careful while selecting academic journals for publication.
Malayalam YouTube video based on this presentation is available at https://youtu.be/z5_LD7qqzbw
Content:
When to start searching for journals
General and Specialized Journals
Acceptance Rates
Journal Selection Tools
Journal Indexing
Web of Science
Scopus
Medline, PubMed, and PubMed Central
UGC CARE
Journal Metrics
Impact Factor
CiteScore
Checklist for Journal Selection
Predatory Journals
Cloned/Hijacked Journals
Some Useful Places
chapter 1 introduction to scientific writingdedy hartama
Publishing research papers in international journals is important for career progression and gaining recognition. There are thousands of academic journals that follow basic publishing standards. The Institute for Scientific Information (ISI) and Scopus are important databases for indexing journals. Good writing requires planning content before focusing on language elements. Strong writing involves outlining ideas and rewriting drafts substantially.
The document outlines the rules for a quiz where each group will be asked one question and can earn 10 points for a correct answer but lose 5 points for an incorrect answer. The question cannot be passed to another group. It then lists various people, companies, and products but does not provide any context around them.
1. Marketing management combines the fields of marketing and management. Marketing involves understanding customer needs and delivering value through products and services, while management involves achieving organizational goals through planning, organizing, and controlling resources.
2. Marketing management is a business process used to manage marketing activities across different levels of organizations, both for-profit and non-profit. Decisions are based on knowledge of marketing functions and managerial techniques.
3. Marketing management is both a science and an art. As a science, it follows general principles to guide decision making. As an art, it requires creatively handling each situation effectively.
- Kaikeyi saved King Dashrath's life during a battle by steadying his chariot wheel with her finger after its axle broke, and later driving the chariot to safety after he fainted.
- As a reward, Dashrath granted Kaikeyi two boons. She later demanded that her son Bharat be made king instead of Rama, and that Rama be exiled to the forest for 14 years.
- So Rama went into exile because Kaikeyi demanded it as one of the boons granted to her by King Dashrath for saving his life during a battle when the axle of his chariot wheel broke.
Navjot Siddhu is Sherry and Harbhajan is Bhajji, so "Chiku" refers to Virat Kohli. An incident from 1980 where police in Bhagalpur jail deprived prisoners of their eyesight using acid inspired the film "Damul" directed by Prakash Jha. Manohar Parrikar graduated from IIT Bombay in 1978 along with Nandan Nilekani and was the first IITian to achieve something significant. The Andaman Islands derive their name from the Sanskrit word for Hanuman. Jammu and Kashmir is the only state permitted to fly its own flag.
This document contains a quiz with 5 rounds of questions on various topics like geography, history, movies, literature and more. Round 1 includes questions about Friday the 13th, the game Bad Piggies is a spin-off of, which cricketer fans should wear helmets for, the fictional character Forbes named the richest in 2006 and the most sold item in the world. Later rounds include questions about statues, founders, actors, pesticide brands, fictional characters like Sherlock Holmes and Feluda and events like the first moon landing.
The document introduces the binomial option pricing model, which values options by allowing the underlying asset price to move up or down by a set percentage at each time period. It assumes two possible prices, constant interest rates over the life of the option, and perfect markets. The model is then demonstrated by calculating the possible up and down prices of a stock and related call option values at the next time period, given inputs like the current stock price, interest rates, and strike price.
This document discusses a potential swap deal between Aditya, Krishna, and a swap bank. Currently, Aditya has a fixed rate of 13% with HSBC and Krishna has a floating rate of the market rate plus 1.5% with CITI. The swap bank offers a rate of the market rate plus 1.9%. Calculations show the new aggregate rate would be 1.4% higher than the current rate. If this differential is shared between the three parties at a ratio of 5:5:4, Aditya and Krishna would each gain 0.5% and the swap bank would gain 0.4%.
Derivatives are financial instruments whose value is derived from an underlying asset such as a commodity, currency, or stock. A derivative is a contract between two parties that specifies conditions to buy or sell the underlying asset at a future date. There are several types of derivatives including forwards, futures, options, and swaps. Forwards are customized contracts negotiated between two parties, while futures are standardized contracts traded on an exchange. Derivatives are used by hedgers to reduce risk, speculators to seek profits, and arbitrageurs to exploit pricing discrepancies across markets.
This document provides definitions of management from various scholars and perspectives. It discusses management as a resource, a system of authority, and as part of the societal elite. Several definitions of management are also provided, focusing on aspects like guiding resources, attaining objectives, planning and controlling efforts. The document then discusses concepts of management, distinguishing it as an activity, process, group, and academic discipline. It also distinguishes management from administration.
This document discusses Robert Katz's three managerial skills - conceptual skills, human relations skills, and technical skills. It provides details about each skill type, including that conceptual skills are most important for top-level managers, human relations skills are required at all levels, and technical skills are most important for low-level managers. The document also lists additional managerial skills like administrative skills and analytical skills.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
How to Setup Warehouse & Location in Odoo 17 InventoryCeline George
In this slide, we'll explore how to set up warehouses and locations in Odoo 17 Inventory. This will help us manage our stock effectively, track inventory levels, and streamline warehouse operations.
Leveraging Generative AI to Drive Nonprofit InnovationTechSoup
In this webinar, participants learned how to utilize Generative AI to streamline operations and elevate member engagement. Amazon Web Service experts provided a customer specific use cases and dived into low/no-code tools that are quick and easy to deploy through Amazon Web Service (AWS.)
How to Fix the Import Error in the Odoo 17Celine George
An import error occurs when a program fails to import a module or library, disrupting its execution. In languages like Python, this issue arises when the specified module cannot be found or accessed, hindering the program's functionality. Resolving import errors is crucial for maintaining smooth software operation and uninterrupted development processes.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
Walmart Business+ and Spark Good for Nonprofits.pdfTechSoup
"Learn about all the ways Walmart supports nonprofit organizations.
You will hear from Liz Willett, the Head of Nonprofits, and hear about what Walmart is doing to help nonprofits, including Walmart Business and Spark Good. Walmart Business+ is a new offer for nonprofits that offers discounts and also streamlines nonprofits order and expense tracking, saving time and money.
The webinar may also give some examples on how nonprofits can best leverage Walmart Business+.
The event will cover the following::
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This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
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There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
1. Outline of the Presentation
• Concept of Citations
• Citation Indexing
• Webof Sciencedatabases
• Limitations of WoSDatabases
• Indian Citation Index (ICI)
• WhyWeNeed ICI?
• Benefits of ICI
• The Impact Factor
• Tools for measuring Impact Analysis
• JCR (Journal Citation Report)
• Other tools for Measuring the Impact analysis
• Example of Google Scholar andScholarometer
2.
3. • Research Methodology
Rig Veda
• Literature Review
Shyam
Veda
• Conclusion
Yajur Veda
Atharva
Veda
• Reference
5. How To Select A Journal
Search Journal Of
your Discipline
Check Impact
Factor
Check the
journal’s
credentials
Select Database
to submit Find the Key word
Check h-index
6. Journal Publication Process
Submission
Desk
Review by
the editor
Sent to the
Reviewers
for Review
If selected
1-Check your
Plagiarism
2- Check the
formatting of the
Journal
3-Use proper
bibliography style
Submit.
8. Concept of Citations
citations symbolize the conceptual association of scientific ideas as
recognized by publishing research authors .
Bythe references they cite in their papers, authors make explicit
linkages between their current research and prior work in the
archive of scientificliterature.
9. distinction between "citation" and
"reference"
• If Paper R contains a bibliographic footnote using
and describing Paper C, then
– R contains a referenceto C,
– C has a citationfrom R.
• The number of references a paper has is measured
by the number of items in its bibliography as
endnotes, footnotes, etc.,
• The number of citations a paper has is found by
looking it up [in a]citation index and seeing how
many others papers mention it."
Source:PriceD.J.D.Little science,bigscience.andbeyond.NewYork:ColumbiaUniversityPress,1986.
10. …..Tostart, it isimportant toclarify the
terminological distinction between
"citation“[6] and "reference".In hisclassic
book Little Science, Big Science, Derek
Price gave a clear definition of both
terms. He said: "It seems to me a great
pity to waste a good technical term by
using the words citation and reference
interchangeably. I therefore propose
and adopt the convention that if Paper
R contains a bibliographic footnote
using and describing PaperC,then R
contains…
R contains a reference
to C,
[6] The concept of citation indexing: A unique
and innovative tool for navigating the
research literature. Current Contents,
January 3, 1994.
Paper
C
Paper
R
Little science, big science...and beyond.
This is my first Current Contents® (CC®)
essay under the rubric of Citation Comments.
As discussed in last week's CC, this new
monthly feature will focus on the applications
of the Institute for Scientific Information's
(ISI's) databases. 1 An appropriate topic to
launch this new series is perhaps the most
rudimentary -- the basic concept of citation
indexing.
To start, it is important to clarify the
terminological distinction between "citation"
and "reference". In his classic book Little
Science, Big Science, Derek Price gave a
clear definition of both terms. He said: "It
seems to me a great pity to waste a good
technical term by using the words citation and
reference interchangeably. I therefore propose
and adopt the convention that if Paper R
contains a bibliographic footnote using and
describing Paper C, then R contains a.
C has a citation
from R.
adopted from : Mathew, N. (n.d.). Citation indexing. Retrieved from
http://ist.psu.edu/faculty_pages/giles/IST497/presentations/Mathew.ppt
11. Citation Indexing
• Introduced by Dr. Eugene Garfield of Institute of Scientific
Information (Webof Science) in 1950s.
• Citation indexing makes links between books and articles that
were written in the past and articles that make reference to
("cite") these older publications. In other words, it is a technique
that allows us to trace the use of an idea (an earlier document)
forward to others who have used ("cited") it.
• The citation indexes were originally designed primarily for
information retrieval. Helps for identifying the relevant research
papers independent of language, title words, or author keywords
14. The Impact Factor
• The impact factor is a measure of the frequency with
which the average article in a journal has been cited in a
particular year or period.
• JCR (Journal Citation Report) of WoShas been major
tool for measuring the Impact factor of journals.
15. Jjournal Citation Report Impact Factor
• The JCRprovides quantitative tools for ranking, evaluating,
categorizing, and comparing journals (Thomson Reuters, 2011).
• JCR impact factor is a ratio between citations and recent citable
items published.
• Thus, the impact factor of a journal is calculated by dividing the
number of current year citations to the source items published in
that journal during the previous two years
16. Calculation for journal impact factor
A= 2020 cites to articles published in 2018 and 2019
B= Number of articles published in 2018 and 2019
C= A/B= 2020 Impact factor
A
Cites in 2020 to
2008-2009 articles
B
Number of articles
Published in 2018
and 2019
C
Impact
Factor (A/B)
Journal of Library
and Information
Science
150 80 1.875
17. Reproductive Systems category of
the 1992 SCI® Journal Citation
Reports®(JCR®)
Reprodu
ct ive
Systems
Journals
(A/D)
JCR
Impact
Factor
A
Cites
in
1992
to
1990-91
Articles
B
Self-
cites in
1992 to
1990-91
Articles
C
(A-
B)
Minu
s
Self-
Cites
D
Articles
Publishe
d 1990-
91
E
(C/D
)
Revise
d
Impac
t
Factor
AM J
REPROD
IMMUNO
L
1.931 224 54 170 116 1.466
ANIM
REPR
OD
SCI
0.701 110 23 87 157 0.554
BIOL
REPR
3.257 726 265 461 530 2.757
Table : Calculation of impact factors without self-citations
20. i10 index refers to the number of paper with 10 or more
citations. It is used by google scholar
The g-index is an index for quantifying productivity in
science, based on publication record (an author-level
metric). It was suggested in 2006 by Leo Egghe.
25. ISI Web of Science
Databases
• Science Citation Index Expanded(SCI)
• Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
• Arts and Humanities Citation Index (A&HCI)
27. Advantages ofCitation Indexing
• SCI, SSCI and A&HCI are multidisciplinary in nature..
• The citation-based associations and connections within
the literature are made by authors themselves.
• Helps for identifying the core periodicals in a subject.
• Helps for quantifying or measuring the research
productivity of an institution or individual or country
or region.
28. Limitations of WoS
Databases
• Majority of the journals are from US.
• Less presence of journals published from third world
countries.
• Only index journals not monographs
• Non-English language journals are not as
comprehensively indexed (Mathew, n.d.)
30. Why WeNeed Indian Citation Index?
Coverage of Web of Science
Citation Index No of Journals
Science Citation Index 3772
Social Science Citation Index 2995
Arts & Humanities Citation Index 1656
Total =8423 Journal
30.30 of the World Publications 24000
Peer Reviewed Journals (Sale,2007) Only 268
Indian Journals are indexed in WoS
32. Benefits of ICI
• Acomprehensive research &evaluation tool for Indian literature
• Facilitates comprehensive scientometric and bibliometric studies on Indian literature
• Helps to measure & analyze individual, institutional, regional, and national R&D
output for strategic planning
• An authentic tool to generate complete and comprehensive analytic reports on the
health of IndianR&D
• ICI can generate national R&D indicators like, Indian Journals Citation Reports, etc.
• Catalyze the image & visibility of Indian knowledge contents and publications
• Helps decision makers to arrive at some conclusive point to decide the superiority of
competitor (s), for some awards, fellowships, recruitments etc.
• Provides a boost to Indian publishing industry at global level
33. Products of ICI
• Indian Science Citation Index (ISCI)
• Indian Health Science Citation Index (IHSCI)
• Indian Agriculture Citation Index (IACI) India
• Social Science & Humanities Citation Index
(ISSHCI)
• Indian Journals Citation Report (IJCR)
• Indian Science &TechnologyAbstracts (ISTA)
• Directory of Indian R&D Journals (DoIJ)
36. • What are the criteria for adding new journals
to ICI?
ICI works with its basic intent to cover all scholarly
journals from India irrespective of their discipline (s)
subject to content selection criteria
37. Indexing Research
Materials
• Research articles
• Review articles
• Short or brief communications
• Editorial and letter to editor
• Research notes
• Case studies
• Case reports
• Opinion papers
• Observations
39. Free Citation Indexing Tool
Cited
documents
7082 For the
Article “TheLarge
Scale.. By
Hawking S.
40. How do we measure Impact Analysis of
Individual/
Institutions
Name of the Software Features Web address
Bibexcel Freely available
Uses SCI, SSCI as underlying data
Support for visualization
http://www8.umu.se/inforsk/Bibexcel/
Network Workbench Freely available
Support of larger scale network analysis(Wikipedia)
Used very much in Biomedical, Social Science andPhysics
Research
http://nwb.cns.iu.edu/index.html
Pajek Freely available
Support for larger scale network analysis andvisualization
http://pajek.imfm.si/doku.php?id=pajek
Publish or Perish Freely available
Uses Google Scholar as underlyingdata
Support for citation analysis (author impact analysis, journal
impact analysisetc)
http://www.harzing.com
Scholarometer Freely available
A browser add-ons
Uses Google Scholar as underlyingdata
Support citation analysis (Author impactanalysis)
http://scholarometer.indiana.edu/