Average-based versus High- and Low-impact Indicators for the Evaluation of Scientific Distributions

  1. Albarrán Pérez, Pedro
  2. Ortuño Ortín, Ignacio
  3. Ruiz-Castillo Ucelay, Javier
Revista:
Documentos de trabajo. Economic series ( Universidad Carlos III. Departamento de Economía )

Año de publicación: 2010

Número: 10

Tipo: Documento de Trabajo

Resumen

Albarrán et al. (2009a) introduced a novel methodology for the evaluation of citation distributions consisting of a pair of high- and a low-impact measures defined over the set of articles with citations below or above a critical citation level CCL. Albarrán et al. (2009b) presented the first empirical applications to a situation in which the world citation distribution in 22 scientific fields is partitioned into three geographical areas: the U.S., the European Union, and the rest of the world. In this paper, we compare our results with those obtained with average-based indicators. For reasonable CCLs, such as the 80th percentile of the world citation distribution in each field, the cardinal differences between the results obtained with our high-impact index and the mean citation rate are of a large order of magnitude. When, in addition, the percentage in the top 5% of most cited articles or the percentage of uncited articles are used, there are still important quantitative differences with respect to the high- and low-impact indicators advocated in our approach when the CCL is fixed at the 80th or the 95th percentile.