| Literature DB >> 30322125 |
Saverio Affatato1, Massimiliano Merola2.
Abstract
Orthopaedic implants offer valuable solutions to many pathologies of bones and joints. The research in this field is driven by the aim of realizing durable and biocompatible devices; therefore, great effort is spent on material analysis and characterization. As a demonstration of the importance assumed by tribology in material devices, wear and friction are two of the main topics of investigation for joint prostheses. Research is led and supported by public institutions, whether universities or research centers, based on the laboratories' outputs. Performance criteria assessing an author's impact on research contribute somewhat to author inflation per publication. The need to measure the research activity of an institution is an essential goal and this leads to the development of indicators capable of giving a rating to the publication that disseminates them. The main purpose of this work was to observe the variation of the Hirsch Index (h-index) when the position of the authors is considered. To this end, we conducted an analysis evaluating the h-index by excluding the intermediate positions. We found that the higher the h value, the larger the divergence between this value and the corrected one. The correction relies on excluding publications for which the author does not have a relevant position. We propose considering the authorship order in a publication in order to obtain more information on the impact that authors have on their research field. We suggest giving the users of researcher registers (e.g., Scopus, Google Scholar) the possibility to exclude from the h-index evaluation the objects of research where the scientist has a marginal position.Entities:
Keywords: bibliometric indicators; biomaterials; citations; h-index; quality of research
Year: 2018 PMID: 30322125 PMCID: PMC6213325 DOI: 10.3390/ma11101967
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Flowchart of the process to obtain the corrected h-value.
Figure 2A box plot shows the modified h-index values (± standard deviation) for all authors considered in this study. The total h-index retrieved from Scopus is the highest of the four classifications.
Figure 3Histogram of the influence of the exclusion criteria on the h-values in sub-cohorts based on the starting h from Scopus.
Figure 4Histogram of the influence of the exclusion criteria on the h-values with sub-cohorts based on the number of publications.