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Directory of Open Access Journals×H-Index×SCImago Journal Rank×
CampoBibliometríaBibliometríaBibliometría
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen200320052010
Autor originalDOAJ Community (Swedish library consortium, later expanded to international consortium)Jorge Hirsch, University of California San DiegoSCImago Group (Spanish research consortium)
TipoDatabaseMetricMetric
Fuente seminalDirectory of Open Access Journals. (2024). About DOAJ. Retrieved from https://doaj.org/ link ↗Hirsch, J. E. (2005). An index to quantify an individual's scientific research output. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 102(46), 16569-16572. DOI ↗González-Pereira, B., Guerrero-Bote, V. P., & Moya-Anegón, F. (2010). The SJR indicator: A new indicator of journals' scientific prestige. Scientometrics, 82(2), 391-400. link ↗
AliasDOAJ, Directory of Open AccessHirsch index, h factor, h-numberSJR, SCImago Journal Rank, Prestige-weighted impact
Relacionados555
ResumenThe Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) is a community-maintained, freely accessible directory of high-quality, peer-reviewed open-access journals and articles established in 2003. DOAJ indexes over 20,000 open-access journals across all disciplines (sciences, social sciences, humanities, arts) from diverse geographic regions. The directory serves researchers, librarians, and administrators as the authoritative curated list of legitimate open-access journals—differentiating quality open-access publications from predatory journals that lack genuine peer review. DOAJ quality seal, awarded to journals meeting stricter governance and transparency criteria, enables identification of the highest-caliber open-access publications.The h-index, or Hirsch index, is a quantitative metric proposed by physicist Jorge Hirsch in 2005 to measure researcher productivity and citation impact simultaneously. A researcher has an h-index of h if they have published at least h papers, each cited at least h times. For example, an h-index of 20 means the researcher has 20 papers each cited at least 20 times. The h-index is widely used in research evaluation, hiring, and promotion decisions, though experts debate its limitations. It provides a single number balancing quantity of publications against quality of citations, offering an intuitive summary of research career impact.SCImago Journal Rank (SJR) is a prestige-weighted metric measuring journal citation impact based on Scopus data, developed by SCImago Group (a Spanish research consortium) in 2010. Unlike raw citation counts, SJR values citations from high-prestige journals more heavily than those from lower-prestige journals, similar to Google's PageRank algorithm. This prestige weighting approach accounts for field-specific citation cultures and provides fairer cross-discipline comparisons than raw impact factor. SJR is widely used for journal ranking, quality assessment, and publication targeting, complementing traditional Impact Factor with a prestige dimension.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Directory of Open Access Journals · H-Index · SCImago Journal Rank. Recuperado el 2026-06-19 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare