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Refine your life with SCOPUS Endre B é ky Account manager, ELSEVIER B.V. 14 April 2009, Kiev, Ukraine

Refine your life with SCOPUS Endre B é ky Account manager, ELSEVIER B.V. 14 April 2009, Kiev, Ukraine. Every day you have to do the CHOICE. What information resource to choose?. Which way to go to office?. What to do in the evening?. What to eat for breakfast?.

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Refine your life with SCOPUS Endre B é ky Account manager, ELSEVIER B.V. 14 April 2009, Kiev, Ukraine

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  1. Refine your life with SCOPUS Endre Béky Account manager, ELSEVIER B.V. 14 April 2009, Kiev, Ukraine

  2. Every day you have to do the CHOICE What information resource to choose? Which way to go to office? What to do in the evening? What to eat for breakfast?

  3. If you work with STM information you have to follow current trends to be the best: • Researches are more multidisciplinary • More international collaboration in researches at the same time more competitive • Financial output • More time is spent to find relevant information than to analyze it • Need access to up-to-date information 24/7, continuousmonitoring of world tendency in your field • It’s not enough to find relevant information, it should be evaluated

  4. If you want to follow these trends… your only choice is … Scopus is the largest abstract and citation database of research literature and quality web sources. It's designed to find the information scientists need. Quick, easy and comprehensive, Scopus provides superior support of the literature research process. Updated daily, Scopus offers

  5. Content Broadest coverage available of Scientific, Technical, Medical and Social Sciences literature • 16,500 titles from more than 4,000 publishers - including • 15,400 peer reviewed journals • 1,200 Open Access journals • 240 conference proceedings • 550 trade publications • 310 book series • 36 million records, of which: • 18 million records include references going back to 1996 (75% include references) • 18 million pre-1996 records go back as far as 1823 • Scopus also covers 431 million quality web sources, including 23 million patents. Web sources are searched via Scirus, and include author homepages, university sites and resources such as the preprint servers CogPrints and ArXiv.org, and OAI compliant resources.

  6. Somefacts about the content coverage(1) • Worldwide coverage; more than half of Scopus content originates from Europe, Latin America and the Asia Pacific region

  7. Somefacts about the content coverage(2) • References go back to 1996. 70% of all Scopus records, back to 1823, have an abstract • Scopus also includes the historical material published by American Chemical Society (back to 1879), the Springer / Kluwer archive, Institute of Physics (back to 1874), American Physical Society (back to 1893), American Institute of Physics (back to 1939), Royal Society of Chemistry (back to 1841) and the journals Nature and Science. Scopus has loaded the archives of Elsevier (back to 1823) and the journals Science (back to 1880) and Nature (back to 1869) • Over 57 million additional cited references that are not covered by Scopus as such (e.g. books) • “Articles-in-Press”from over 3,000 journals. These articles are available in Scopus prior to their official publication date, from Elsevier, Springer / Kluwer, Karger Medical and Scientific Publishers, Nature Publishing Group (NPG) and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). The AIP articles from BioMed Central will be available shortly • Coverage is over 99% complete as of 1996 - issue level

  8. Subject areas • Life Sciences >3,400 titles • Health Sciences > 5,300 titles (including 100% coverage of Medline titles) • Physical Sciences > 5,500 titles • Social Sciences > 2,850 titles • Arts and Humanities > 1,400 titles (from June 2009)

  9. Full list of titles (even for non-subscribers) at http://info.scopus.com

  10. Ukrainian journals covered in Scopus

  11. How does it work?

  12. Designed to spend less time mastering databases and more time on research

  13. Easy creating of search request in Advanced Search More than 40 search fields

  14. Results page Search sources 5 types of sorting results, incl. Cited by

  15. Abstract and references in Scopus: a lot of links to help your research

  16. Abstract and references in Scopus: a lot of links to help your research (cont)

  17. Refine results on Results page

  18. You can limit and specify your search results within: But if your’re looking for specific Title, or Author, or Affiliation we have the specific tools to FIND and to EVALUATE this data

  19. Research Performance Measurementsin Scopus

  20. Source search and evaluation

  21. Source search and evaluation

  22. Journal page in Scopus

  23. Journal Analyzer: • for Editors/publishing teamsThe Scopus Journal Analyzer gives quick, easy access to an objective and transparent overview of the performance of your own and your competitors’ journals over time. This can help you analyze and manage journal portfolios more effectively, identify new growth areas, set out a strategy to increase performance or decide which journals you would like to be an editorial board member for. • for Researchers/University scientistsThe Scopus Journal Analyzer enables you to search for journals within a specific field, identify which are the most influential and find out who publishes them. This will help you to decide where to publish to get the best visibility for your work and how to prioritize your submissions. It can also help you decide which journal you would like to review for. • for Librarians and information specialistsThe Scopus Journal Analyzer enables you to search for all journals in a specific subject area and view their current details and performance over time. This will help you ensure you are only investing in the most influential and relevant journals.

  24. Journal Analyzer Provides you with four graphical/table representations of the journals You can select and compare up to 10 journals in a specific field

  25. Total Citations displays the total number of citations the selected journals receive over the course of each year

  26. Articles Published shows the number of articles published by each journal over time

  27. Trend Line provides the number of citations received in that year, regardless of the publication date of the cited document, divided by the total number of documents published in that year

  28. % Not Citations shows the percentage of not cited documents of the selected journals over the course of each year

  29. Citation Tracker You can follow the impact of published documents via Citation Tracker

  30. Citation Tracker Number of documents cited articles from Tsitologiya I Genetika (2003) Articles published in Tsitologiya I Genetika in 2003

  31. The Scopus Author Identifier The Scopus Author Identifier helps solve one of the biggest problems associated with author searching: • How do you distinguish between articles belonging authors with similar names? • How can you be confident that you captured all results for an author when their name is recorded in different ways? • And, can you be sure that names with unusual characters such as accents have been included?

  32. Author Identifier Author Identifier presents the preferred author name along with the variants of the name that have been grouped into an author profile. Automatic grouping into one Author Profile done by: Variants of name; Source titles; So-authors; Subject area; Affiliation If one of the criteria is not similar, Scopus doesn’t group documents into one Author Profile. But you can do it manually !

  33. Author Details We’re open for your feedback

  34. Grouping Authors

  35. Author’s Output via Citation Tracker Number of documents cited this author’s articles

  36. “Real” Author’s Output via Citation Tracker Number of documents cited this author’s articles, excluding self citations

  37. h-index The h-index (short for highly cited index) was developed in 2005 by Professor Hirsch, a condensed-matter physicist at the University of California in San Diego, to qualify the impact and quantity of an individual’s research performance. Professor Hirsch states in the introduction to his paper that most researchers seek to gain a better understanding of the impact of their work, “For the few scientists who earn a Nobel Prize, the impact and relevance of their research is unquestionable. How does one quantify the cumulative impact and relevance of an individual’s scientific research output?”

  38. h-index formula A scientist has index h if h of his or her NP (number of papers) papers have at least h citations each and the other (NP – h) papers have fewer than h citations each. J.E. Hirsch, “An index to quantify an individual’s scientific research output,” PNAS 102, 16569-16572 (2005) http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/physics/pdf/0508/0508025.pdf

  39. h-Index counted and h-graphs created automatically

  40. h-graphs

  41. Benefits of Author Identifier: • for authorsit does the hard work for you by automatically matching variations of an author’s name and distinguishing between authors with the same name. All the documents beloning to a speciifc author will be listed in the author's details (including numbers of citations received, affiliations, h-index) • for deans, chancellors, provosts and heads of departmentsit will ensure you can identify people and their work more quickly and efficiently. This leaves you with more time for the actual work and enables you to make well-informed strategic decisions. • for librarians and information specialistsit ensures you have all the documents belonging to an individual author as part of your institute within your own repository.

  42. The Scopus Affiliation Identifier is the world’s first online tool to automatically identify and match an organization with all of its research output. It turns an expensive and laborious task into a simple search - leaving you with more time to analyze the results and make clear, informed decisions. This is a notoriously difficult task because the organization’s name is often spelled or recorded differently by individual sources; it may change its name or have a name that is very similar to another organization. One such example is the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where articles found in Scopus and published by authors belonging to this institute carry more than 1,700 name variants.

  43. Affiliation Search

  44. Organization’s Profile

  45. Organization’s data Journals where published University’s authors The most published author of the University The most cited author of the University

  46. Benefits of Affiliation Identifier: • for deans, chancellors, provostsit will help reduce investment in research performance measurement by reducing the time needed by staff to perform laborious bibliometric searches. This will allow money to be invested in other areas such as education and learning. Ultimately, the Scopus Affiliation Identifier will help you make faster, better-informed strategic decisions • for heads of departmentsit reduces the time needed to identify and aggregate all the documents belonging to a specific organization. This leaves you with more time to do the actual benchmarking analysis, and enables you to make well-informed strategic decisions • for senior and middle managementit will ensure you can identify research trends more quickly and efficiently • for librariansit ensures you have all the documents belonging to your institute within your own repository.

  47. FromWoS to Scopus: Now Scopus Custom Data is used to help establish the annual THES-QS World University Rankings.Scopus has been chosen to provide the data source for the metric evaluation for the official rankings to ensure that greater clarity and transparency can be guaranteed THES World University Rankings use Scopus from 2007

  48. How to get your journal indexed in Scopus? Hard requirements • Active journal • Peer review process • English abstractSoft requirements – recommendation for higher success rate • Regularly updated journal website in local language and English • Active and international editorial board In 2008 out of 2000 journals application approx. 800 journals were accepted.

  49. Additional Features

  50. Personal features help you to save time for further sessions in Scopus

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