The Impact Factor of a journal is a quantitative way of assessing its worth and relevance to the academic community it serves. Many librarians see the ratio between Impact Factor and price as a suitable yardstick by which to measure the value of their collections. In addition, the research assessment exercises which, in many countries, are now being carried out on a more formal basis mean that authors submitting original research must publish it in a journal with the highest perceived worth possible in order to secure future funding, job promotions and peer recognition. It has been suspected [T. Opthof, Cardiovasc. Res. 33 (1997) 1; J. Stegmann, Nature 390 (1990) 550], however, that a particular author's impact is not much related to the journals in which her/he publishes. As will be demonstrated in this letter, the impact of articles published in rheological journals is largely influenced by criteria such as length of article, number of authors, number of cited references. for LaTeX users @article{MKroger2005-15, author = {M. Kr\"oger}, title = {Publication specific impact of articles published by rheological journals}, journal = {Appl. Rheol.}, volume = {15}, pages = {406-409}, year = {2005} }
\bibitem{MKroger2005-15} M. Kr\"oger, Publication specific impact of articles published by rheological journals, Appl. Rheol. {\bf 15} (2005) 406-409.MKroger2005-15 M. Kr\"oger Publication specific impact of articles published by rheological journals Appl. Rheol.,15,2005,406-409 |