Impact of African journals in ISI databases
The calculation of percentile impact factors and their use are illustrated for all ISI-covered journals published in Africa or carrying the words Africa or African in their title. For each African journal we selected a Western journal (defined as a journal published in North America or Western Europ...
Saved in:
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2021
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152608 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Institution: | Nanyang Technological University |
Language: | English |
id |
sg-ntu-dr.10356-152608 |
---|---|
record_format |
dspace |
spelling |
sg-ntu-dr.10356-1526082021-09-08T20:10:27Z Impact of African journals in ISI databases P., Sainul Abideen Gregorio, Orlando Hamwela, Virginia Kabyema, Ngenjo Kubaiza, Rahma Legesse, Henock Mabuza, Happiness Sibongile Mahasin, Balla Elnour Manglal-lal, Mendoza Christine Masele, Juma James Mendoza, Daisy Mutsungi, Irvine Nakasagga, Juliet Rousseau, Ronald Benavides, Manuel Soto Library and information science The calculation of percentile impact factors and their use are illustrated for all ISI-covered journals published in Africa or carrying the words Africa or African in their title. For each African journal we selected a Western journal (defined as a journal published in North America or Western Europe) belonging to the same journal category in ISI’s Journal Citation Reports® and having a similar ISI impact factor. For the groups of journals studied here, we did not find a significant difference between any of the studied impact factors for African journals and for matched Western ones. Surprisingly, for these journals we did not even find a statistically significant difference between the average ISI impact factor, the first quartile impact factor, and the median impact factor. These results indicate that for journals with relatively low impact factors there is little difference between the various ways in which synchronous impact factors are calculated. Published version 2021-09-06T01:18:08Z 2021-09-06T01:18:08Z 2005 Journal Article P., S. A., Gregorio, O., Hamwela, V., Kabyema, N., Kubaiza, R., Legesse, H., Mabuza, H. S., Mahasin, B. E., Manglal-lal, M. C., Masele, J. J., Mendoza, D., Mutsungi, I., Nakasagga, J., Rousseau, R. & Benavides, M. S. (2005). Impact of African journals in ISI databases. Library and Information Science Research E-Journal, 15(2), 1-13. https://dx.doi.org/10.32655/LIBRES.2005.2.2 1058-6768 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152608 10.32655/LIBRES.2005.2.2 2 15 1 13 en Library and Information Science Research E-Journal © 2005 The Authors. All rights reserved. application/pdf |
institution |
Nanyang Technological University |
building |
NTU Library |
continent |
Asia |
country |
Singapore Singapore |
content_provider |
NTU Library |
collection |
DR-NTU |
language |
English |
topic |
Library and information science |
spellingShingle |
Library and information science P., Sainul Abideen Gregorio, Orlando Hamwela, Virginia Kabyema, Ngenjo Kubaiza, Rahma Legesse, Henock Mabuza, Happiness Sibongile Mahasin, Balla Elnour Manglal-lal, Mendoza Christine Masele, Juma James Mendoza, Daisy Mutsungi, Irvine Nakasagga, Juliet Rousseau, Ronald Benavides, Manuel Soto Impact of African journals in ISI databases |
description |
The calculation of percentile impact factors and their use are illustrated for all ISI-covered journals published in Africa or carrying the words Africa or African in their title. For each African journal we selected a Western journal (defined as a journal published in North America or Western Europe) belonging to the same journal category in ISI’s Journal Citation Reports® and having a similar ISI impact factor.
For the groups of journals studied here, we did not find a significant difference between any of the studied impact factors for African journals and for matched Western ones. Surprisingly, for these journals we did not even find a statistically significant difference between the average ISI impact factor, the first quartile impact factor, and the median impact factor. These results indicate that for journals with relatively low impact factors there is little difference between the various ways in which synchronous impact factors are calculated. |
format |
Article |
author |
P., Sainul Abideen Gregorio, Orlando Hamwela, Virginia Kabyema, Ngenjo Kubaiza, Rahma Legesse, Henock Mabuza, Happiness Sibongile Mahasin, Balla Elnour Manglal-lal, Mendoza Christine Masele, Juma James Mendoza, Daisy Mutsungi, Irvine Nakasagga, Juliet Rousseau, Ronald Benavides, Manuel Soto |
author_facet |
P., Sainul Abideen Gregorio, Orlando Hamwela, Virginia Kabyema, Ngenjo Kubaiza, Rahma Legesse, Henock Mabuza, Happiness Sibongile Mahasin, Balla Elnour Manglal-lal, Mendoza Christine Masele, Juma James Mendoza, Daisy Mutsungi, Irvine Nakasagga, Juliet Rousseau, Ronald Benavides, Manuel Soto |
author_sort |
P., Sainul Abideen |
title |
Impact of African journals in ISI databases |
title_short |
Impact of African journals in ISI databases |
title_full |
Impact of African journals in ISI databases |
title_fullStr |
Impact of African journals in ISI databases |
title_full_unstemmed |
Impact of African journals in ISI databases |
title_sort |
impact of african journals in isi databases |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152608 |
_version_ |
1710686934769074176 |