Scopus Journal Analyzer
The Scopus Journal Analyzer gives editors, publishing teams, researchers and librarians quick, easy access to a transparent and objective overview of the journal landscape going back to 1996.
Performances of Journals can be easily evaluated and compared using the four graphical representations of the journals:
Total Citations displays the total number of citations the selected journals receive over the course of each year.
Articles Published shows the number of articles published by each journal over time.
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.
% not cited shows the percentage of articles published in that year that have never been cited to date.
Click here for more information, or visit Elsevier Training Helpdesk for your guide to online training options and reference materials.
Scopus Affiliation Identifier
Clear decisions start here: The Scopus Affiliation Identifier automatically identifies and matches an organisation with all of its research output. It turns an expensive, laborious and time-consuming task into a simple search – leaving you with more time to analyse the results and make clear, informed decisions.
Find not only all documents belonging to your organisation but also
who collaborates with you
how many authors are affiliated to your organisation
which subject areas are publishing the most
search within your results for particular information you might be looking for, such as all the work done by a particular author, for instance.
Click here for more information, or visit Elsevier Training Helpdesk for your guide to online training options and reference materials.
Document Download Manager
The Document Download Manager has the capability to select, download and save up to 50 entitled full-text articles simultaneously. One can now manage downloads directly from the Scopus results list in an easy way that fits directly into their daily workflow. This unique tool, available to all Scopus users, improves both productivity and effectiveness significantly.
h index
The h index is a tool to evaluate an author’s body of work or a user-specified collection of selected articles. Complemented by unique graphs, it is available for all authors in Scopus.
An author’s h-index can be viewed by either clicking on the Scopus Citation Tracker on the author search results page or by viewing the author details page.
Click here for more information, or visit Elsevier Training Helpdesk for your guide to online training options and reference materials.
Scopus appeals to a wide range of users. What does it do for you?
As an administrator or policy maker:
Ensure decisions are made on informed, unbiased and credible research.
Analyse the influence of authors from an organisation within the global research community.
Identify leading research to attract grants.
Track and evaluate your researchers’ performance and benchmark the research output against other institutes.
As a Researcher:
Find relevant articles fast without duplicating your research or missing any important information.
Substantiate grant application by finding out who is citing whom – and how many citations an article or an author has.
As a Librarian:
Provide users with quick and immediate access to peer reviewed & indexed content and full text articles.
Provide image-based linking to full text articles which increase the visibility of, and access to, other library resources.
Support your collection management decision making thorough analysis of highly cited articles.
For More Information, contact:
Anne Harvey |a.harvey@elsevier.com
Linda Dunne |l.dunne@elsevier.com
Nigel Ashworth |n.ashworth@elsevier.com