Statistics

SJR Scimago Journal & Country Rank
Métricas de la RPMESP en Scimago durante los años 2009 al 2021

 

 

         
   

SCImago Journal Rank (SJR):

The SJR is a size-independent prestige indicator that ranks journals by their 'average prestige per article'. It is based on the idea that 'all citations are not created equal'. SJR is a measure of scientific influence of journals that accounts for both the number of citations received by a journal and the importance or prestige of the journals where such citations come from It measures the scientific influence of the average article in a journal, it expresses how central to the global scientific discussion an average article of the journal is.
 
         
    International Collaboration accounts for the articles that have been produced by researchers from several countries. The chart shows the ratio of a journal's documents signed by researchers from more than one country; that is including more than one country address.  
         
    This indicator counts the number of citations received by documents from a journal and divides them by the total number of documents published in that journal. The chart shows the evolution of the average number of times documents published in a journal in the past two, three and four years have been cited in the current year. The two years line is equivalent to journal impact factor ™ (Thomson Reuters) metric.  
         
   

Evolution of the total number of citations and journal’s self-citations received by a journal's published documents during the three previous years.

Journal Self-citation is defined as the number of citations from a journal citing article to articles published by the same journal.

 
         
 

 

Scopus
CiteScore of the RPMESP in Scopus from 2009 to the present day 

 

       
   

 

       

 

Google Académico 

 

   
 

         
   

Google Scholar Metrics provide an easy way for authors to quickly gauge the visibility and influence of recent articles in scholarly publications.

Scholar Metrics currently cover articles published between 2017 and 2021, both inclusive. The metrics are based on citations from all articles that were indexed in Google Scholar in June 2022

This latest update shows that RPMESP is the fifth journal with the highest h5 index among journals published in Spanish worldwide.