Immediacy Index
The Immediacy Index measures how quickly a journal's articles are cited by counting the citations they receive in the very year they are published. Eugene Garfield, who created the Science Citation Index and the impact factor, introduced the immediacy index as part of the Institute for Scientific Information's journal-evaluation methodology and described it in his landmark 1972 Science paper on citation analysis as a tool in journal evaluation. While the impact factor averages citations over a two-year window, the immediacy index uses a zero-year window: it divides the citations made in a given year to that year's articles by the number of citable items published that year. A high immediacy index means a journal's work is picked up almost immediately, the signature of a fast-moving, frontier field or of journals that publish hot, rapidly cited material. It is a measure of citation speed rather than of total impact.
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Kilder
- Garfield, E. (1972). Citation analysis as a tool in journal evaluation. Science, 178(4060), 471-479. DOI: 10.1126/science.178.4060.471 ↗
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ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Immediacy Index: Same-Year Citation Rate of a Journal. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/da/bibliometrics/immediacy-index
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- Citation Half-Life and Literature ObsolescenceBibliometri↔ sammenlign
- Price Index (Citation Recency)Bibliometri↔ sammenlign
- Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP)Bibliometri↔ sammenlign
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