How can I increase my journal impact factor?

How can I increase my journal impact factor?

Identifying zero-cited papers. A percentage of articles may never be cited at all,but would still affect the Impact Factor calculation.

  • Publishing more review articles.
  • Publishing special issues or special collections.
  • Quantity and quality of articles.
  • Free access campaigns.
  • Does journal impact factor really matter?

    Why does impact factor matter? The emphasis on journal impact factor is controversial within the scientific community. As discussed in Nature, this controversy stems from the concern that impact factor may not adequately capture journal quality or influence and could contribute to an “unhealthy research culture” aimed at improving impact factors.

    How is the journal impact factor calculate?

    Focus on desired subject categories,enabling you to review journal titles and key performance indicators in the category

  • Compare multiple journals based on a chosen indicator
  • Evaluate the performance of journals in which you or your organization has published research
  • Recognize trending journals in key research categories
  • How can I confirm the impact factor of a journal?

    Multicenter (n=3),Broad validation to a Level II Clinical Decision Rule

  • Rule consists of two objective laboratory criteria,easy to remember and apply
  • Potential to reduce resource utilization
  • What is wrong with journals’ impact factor?

    Not so! Like citations, journal status and quality are not very well correlated: there is no association between statistical power and impact factor, and journals with higher impact factor have more papers with erroneous p-values. This pattern is repeated in the Replication Markets data.

    Which one is high impact factor journal?

    The following list highlights some recent SRP-funded publications in high impact journals. The New England Journal of Medicine (impact factor: 70.670) JAMA – Journal of the American Medical Association (impact factor: 51.273)