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Contemporary h-Index×m-Quotient (Hirsch m)×
CampoBibliometríaBibliometría
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen20072005
Autor originalAntonis Sidiropoulos, Dimitrios Katsaros & Yannis ManolopoulosJorge E. Hirsch
TipoAge-discounted author impact indexCareer-length-normalized author impact rate
Fuente seminalSidiropoulos, A., Katsaros, D., & Manolopoulos, Y. (2007). Generalized Hirsch h-index for disclosing latent facts in citation networks. Scientometrics, 72(2), 253-280. DOI ↗Hirsch, J. E. (2005). An index to quantify an individual's scientific research output. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 102(46), 16569-16572. DOI ↗
Aliashc-index, time-weighted h-index, age-decayed h-indexHirsch m-quotient, m-parameter, h-index per year
Relacionados33
ResumenThe contemporary h-index, introduced by Sidiropoulos, Katsaros, and Manolopoulos in 2007, modifies Hirsch's h-index to reward recent scientific activity over old laurels. The plain h-index never decreases and treats a citation earned decades ago the same as one earned last year, so a researcher who has stopped publishing can coast on an aging body of work. The contemporary index assigns each paper an age-discounted score, multiplying its citation count by a factor that shrinks as the paper grows older, and then applies the usual h-index ranking criterion to these scores. The result distinguishes currently active, recently impactful researchers from those whose reputation rests on distant achievements.The m-quotient, defined by Jorge Hirsch in the same 2005 paper that introduced the h-index, normalizes an author's h-index by the length of their scientific career. Because the h-index can only grow over time and never decreases, raw h-values systematically favor senior researchers and make it unfair to compare early-career scientists with established ones. The m-quotient divides the h-index by the number of years since the researcher's first publication, yielding a rate of impact accumulation per year. Hirsch proposed rough benchmarks on this scale, suggesting that a sustained value near 1 characterizes a successful scientist, near 2 an outstanding one, and near 3 a truly exceptional figure, making the m-quotient a tool for comparing researchers at different career stages.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Contemporary h-Index · m-Quotient (Hirsch m). Recuperado el 2026-06-25 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare