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  • Members: 202
  • Category: Other
  • Founded: Mar 27, 2006
  • Language: English
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#1512 From: "Afnan" <chaudary_afnan@...>
Date: Tue Mar 1, 2011 6:31 pm
Subject: ISOSS WEBSITE (NEW VERSION LAUNCHED )---I.T Department ---ISOSS
chaudary_afnan
Send Email Send Email
 

Dear Members

 

The I.T department of ISOSS H.Q has been launched a new version of ISOSS website(v.2.1) with new features.

 

Features:

 

1- Online Proceedings of Conferences

 

2- Announcements / News of upcoming Conferences

 

3- Photo Gallery (Under Construction)

 

4- Live Support redirected from ISOSS H.Q (I.T. Department)

 

5- Compatibility with all browsers (IE, Mozilla, Chrome etc..)

 

6- UP LINK of website has been improved

 

Suggestions on improvement of ISOSS WEBSITE and its effectiveness as an international organization of professional statisticians are welcome.

 

Web Link: www.isoss.com.pk

 

 Regards

---

Muhammad Afnan

I.T Manager

ISOSS, Lahore

Pakistan 

 

 


#1513 From: CHAUDARY MUHAMMAD AFNAN <chaudary_afnan@...>
Date: Wed Mar 2, 2011 7:13 am
Subject: Live ISOSS support Console (Fixed now )
chaudary_afnan
Send Email Send Email
 
Dear Members
 
Please click here to see how to connect with ISOSS LIVE SUPPORT
 
 
Click Here To see: http://tinypic.com/view.php?pic=2d0xmol&s=7

after click on "ISOSS support is " wait some seconds to redirect you to I.T Department of ISOSS and within seconds the console of chat will be connected to ISOSS H.Q
 
We hope that this feature will be beneficial for all ISOSS members
 
Regards
-------
Muhammad Afnan
I.T Manager
I.T Department ISOSS
Lahore , Pakistan
Facebook (ISOSS) :
Click Here
Twitter (ISOSS) : Click Here
Facebook (Personal):Click Here

 

 


#1514 From: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
Date: Thu Mar 3, 2011 6:54 am
Subject: FW: Call for the 2011 Savage award
secretary@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 

From: International list of people interested in Bayesian Statistics [mailto:VALENCIALIST@...] On Behalf Of Jose M Bernardo
Sent: Wednesday, March 02, 2011 8:31 PM
To: VALENCIALIST@...
Subject: Call for the 2011 Savage award

 

 

From: Judith ROUSSEAU <rousseau@...>

Date: March 1, 2011 

Subject: call for the 2011 Savage award




Call for the 2011 Savage award

The Prize Committee of ISBA is pleased to announce two Savage Awards for outstanding Bayesian dissertations in Theory and Methods and Applied Methodology. For details on the Savage awards, including names of past winners,
eligibility details, and the on-line application procedure, please visit:

    http://www.bayesian.org/awards/Savage.html

The deadline for submission is *May 31, 2011*. Note that the time schedule has changed this year and from now on.


Judith Rousseau
(Chair, ISBA Prize Committee)

 

 

____________________________________________________________

The Valencia Mailing List contains about 2,000 entries of people interested in Bayesian Statistics. 

It was set to send information about the Valencia International Meetings on Bayesian Statistics,

and other material of interest to the Bayesian community.

 

Valencia 9, held in June 2010, was the last Valencia Meeting. The list will remain operative until

the corresponding Proceedings "Bayesian Statistics 9", to be published by Oxford University Press,

are finalized. The list will then be merged with the list operated by ISBA, the International Society for Bayesian Analysis.

 

In the meantime, you may still send relevant information to the list by sending a text only message to

valencialist@.... This will then be sent to Jose M. Bernardo for approval, and then distributed to the list.

 

If you receive this message, then you are on the Valencia List.

1. If you use an anti-spam programme, please let <valencialist@...> in.

2. If you want to be deleted from the list, please reply "unsubscribe"

3. If we are not using your preferred e-mail address, please reply and specify both the obsolete address to be deleted and the new address to be used.

 

Valencia Meetings Mailing List

c/o Prof. Dr. Jose M. Bernardo

Universidad de Valencia

 


#1515 From: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
Date: Thu Mar 3, 2011 6:57 am
Subject: FW: The table of contents of the latest issue of Iranian Journal of Medical Sciences
secretary@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 

From: Ijms Ijms [mailto:ijmsjournal@...]
Sent: Thursday, March 03, 2011 10:51 AM
To: undisclosed recipients:
Subject: The table of contents of the latest issue of Iranian Journal of Medical Sciences

 

 

Dear Sir/Madam

 

Enclosed please find the Table of contents of the latest issue of Iranian Journal of Medical Sciences.

 

Sincerely yours

 

Behrooz Astaneh MD
Deputy Editor
Iranian Journal of Medical Sciences
http://ijms.sums.ac.ir

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


1 of 1 File(s)


#1516 From: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
Date: Sat Mar 5, 2011 2:22 pm
Subject: FW: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)
secretary@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 

From: IT MANAGER ISOSS [mailto:it-manager@...]
Sent: Saturday, March 05, 2011 5:06 PM
To: ISOSS Headquarters; Shahjahan.Khan@...; drmunir@...; hanif@...
Subject: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)

 

Dear Sir

 

How are you I hope that you will be fine by the blessings of God .

 

Sir , according to your guidance we had re-modified the ISOSS website on priority basis and now the updated website has launched (all programming bugs fixed) so please visit the website and give us your valuable feedbacks for its further improvement .

 

New features of website :

 

1-      Excellent UPLINK time  (Loading fast)

2-      Live Support 24/7 (Monday to Saturday) with automatic ticket generated system for every request

3-      Automatic follow – up to the pending requests

4-      Latest GEO-IP technology is working at back-end (This will helpful to collect data, that from which country how many users are visiting our website due to their interests in STATISTICS)

5-      Online proceedings panel

6-      Online conferences announcements/news

7-      ISOSS NEWS ROOM (ONLINE) at Face of Website (Auto updates)

8-      Online requests/Feedbacks submit panel (Auto Ticket Generated System at back end)

9-      Better re-fresh rate (Website Engine)

10-   Blocked all unauthorized spiders(search engines)

11-   Easy availability for YAHOO,GOOGLE,MSN,ALTAVISTA, spiders

12-   Easy – TO- View Photo section (Conferences Coverage)

13-   Auto back-ups of databases regarding website

14-   No Downtime of website

 

 

The above mentioned updates are working properly and I.T Department tried its best to done this task as soon as possible .

 

Waiting your feedbacks

 

Regards

 

--------

Muhammad Afnan

I.T Manager

ISOSS , Lahore

Pakistan

Contact:+92-332-4715946


#1517 From: Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...>
Date: Tue Mar 8, 2011 9:03 am
Subject: Re: FW: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)
mehvish.hussain
Send Email Send Email
 
I want to suggest one thing.
 
The news (topside), Announcements (Right side) and famous statistician names (Bottom side) should be crawled bit slow. Also, the font or transition effect of news (topside) and statisticians (bottom side) is quite sharp edged. Please, either change the font or smooth the transition effect.

I am not much expert in computer graphics etc. What I felt, I expressed. Please accept my apology in advance, if it doesn't on computer graphics range.
 

--- On Sat, 5/3/11, ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...> wrote:

From: ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...>
Subject: [isoss] FW: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)
To: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
Date: Saturday, 5 March, 2011, 6:22

 

 

 

From: IT MANAGER ISOSS [mailto:it-manager@...]
Sent: Saturday, March 05, 2011 5:06 PM
To: ISOSS Headquarters; Shahjahan.Khan@...; drmunir@...; hanif@...
Subject: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)

 

Dear Sir

 

How are you I hope that you will be fine by the blessings of God .

 

Sir , according to your guidance we had re-modified the ISOSS website on priority basis and now the updated website has launched (all programming bugs fixed) so please visit the website and give us your valuable feedbacks for its further improvement .

 

New features of website :

 

1-      Excellent UPLINK time  (Loading fast)

2-      Live Support 24/7 (Monday to Saturday) with automatic ticket generated system for every request

3-      Automatic follow – up to the pending requests

4-      Latest GEO-IP technology is working at back-end (This will helpful to collect data, that from which country how many users are visiting our website due to their interests in STATISTICS)

5-      Online proceedings panel

6-      Online conferences announcements/news

7-      ISOSS NEWS ROOM (ONLINE) at Face of Website (Auto updates)

8-      Online requests/Feedbacks submit panel (Auto Ticket Generated System at back end)

9-      Better re-fresh rate (Website Engine)

10-   Blocked all unauthorized spiders(search engines)

11-   Easy availability for YAHOO,GOOGLE,MSN,ALTAVISTA, spiders

12-   Easy – TO- View Photo section (Conferences Coverage)

13-   Auto back-ups of databases regarding website

14-   No Downtime of website

 

 

The above mentioned updates are working properly and I.T Department tried its best to done this task as soon as possible .

 

Waiting your feedbacks

 

Regards

 

--------

Muhammad Afnan

I.T Manager

ISOSS , Lahore

Pakistan

Contact:+92-332-4715946



#1518 From: CHAUDARY MUHAMMAD AFNAN <chaudary_afnan@...>
Date: Tue Mar 8, 2011 1:55 pm
Subject: Re: FW: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)
chaudary_afnan
Send Email Send Email
 
Dear Member (Miss. Mehwish)
 
Thanks for your suggestion we are working in Live Media console in which you will be able to see news / updates with smooth edges fonts so in some days we will launced it. The development/modification is still continous on priority basis
 
We are waiting your kind suggestions/Feedbacks  regardings ISOSS website
 
Regards
 
-------
Muhammad Afnan
I.T Manager
I.T Department ISOSS
Lahore , Pakistan
Facebook (ISOSS) :
Click Here
Twitter (ISOSS) : Click Here
Facebook (Personal):Click Here

 

 


--- On Tue, 8/3/11, Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...> wrote:

From: Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...>
Subject: Re: [isoss] FW: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)
To: isoss@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tuesday, 8 March, 2011, 14:03

 
I want to suggest one thing.
 
The news (topside), Announcements (Right side) and famous statistician names (Bottom side) should be crawled bit slow. Also, the font or transition effect of news (topside) and statisticians (bottom side) is quite sharp edged. Please, either change the font or smooth the transition effect.

I am not much expert in computer graphics etc. What I felt, I expressed. Please accept my apology in advance, if it doesn't on computer graphics range.
 

--- On Sat, 5/3/11, ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...> wrote:

From: ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...>
Subject: [isoss] FW: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)
To: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
Date: Saturday, 5 March, 2011, 6:22

 

 

 

From: IT MANAGER ISOSS [mailto:it-manager@...]
Sent: Saturday, March 05, 2011 5:06 PM
To: ISOSS Headquarters; Shahjahan.Khan@...; drmunir@...; hanif@...
Subject: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)

 

Dear Sir

 

How are you I hope that you will be fine by the blessings of God .

 

Sir , according to your guidance we had re-modified the ISOSS website on priority basis and now the updated website has launched (all programming bugs fixed) so please visit the website and give us your valuable feedbacks for its further improvement .

 

New features of website :

 

1-      Excellent UPLINK time  (Loading fast)

2-      Live Support 24/7 (Monday to Saturday) with automatic ticket generated system for every request

3-      Automatic follow – up to the pending requests

4-      Latest GEO-IP technology is working at back-end (This will helpful to collect data, that from which country how many users are visiting our website due to their interests in STATISTICS)

5-      Online proceedings panel

6-      Online conferences announcements/news

7-      ISOSS NEWS ROOM (ONLINE) at Face of Website (Auto updates)

8-      Online requests/Feedbacks submit panel (Auto Ticket Generated System at back end)

9-      Better re-fresh rate (Website Engine)

10-   Blocked all unauthorized spiders(search engines)

11-   Easy availability for YAHOO,GOOGLE,MSN,ALTAVISTA, spiders

12-   Easy – TO- View Photo section (Conferences Coverage)

13-   Auto back-ups of databases regarding website

14-   No Downtime of website

 

 

The above mentioned updates are working properly and I.T Department tried its best to done this task as soon as possible .

 

Waiting your feedbacks

 

Regards

 

--------

Muhammad Afnan

I.T Manager

ISOSS , Lahore

Pakistan

Contact:+92-332-4715946




#1519 From: Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...>
Date: Tue Mar 8, 2011 5:12 pm
Subject: Re: FW: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)
mehvish.hussain
Send Email Send Email
 

Keep it up.
 
Wish you best of Luck,
 
Regards,
 
Mehwish Hussain
 

--- On Tue, 8/3/11, CHAUDARY MUHAMMAD AFNAN <chaudary_afnan@...> wrote:

From: CHAUDARY MUHAMMAD AFNAN <chaudary_afnan@...>
Subject: Re: [isoss] FW: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)
To: isoss@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tuesday, 8 March, 2011, 5:55

 
Dear Member (Miss. Mehwish)
 
Thanks for your suggestion we are working in Live Media console in which you will be able to see news / updates with smooth edges fonts so in some days we will launced it. The development/modification is still continous on priority basis
 
We are waiting your kind suggestions/Feedbacks  regardings ISOSS website
 
Regards
 
-------
Muhammad Afnan
I.T Manager
I.T Department ISOSS
Lahore , Pakistan
Facebook (ISOSS) :
Click Here
Twitter (ISOSS) : Click Here
Facebook (Personal):Click Here

 

 


--- On Tue, 8/3/11, Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...> wrote:

From: Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...>
Subject: Re: [isoss] FW: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)
To: isoss@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tuesday, 8 March, 2011, 14:03

 
I want to suggest one thing.
 
The news (topside), Announcements (Right side) and famous statistician names (Bottom side) should be crawled bit slow. Also, the font or transition effect of news (topside) and statisticians (bottom side) is quite sharp edged. Please, either change the font or smooth the transition effect.

I am not much expert in computer graphics etc. What I felt, I expressed. Please accept my apology in advance, if it doesn't on computer graphics range.
 

--- On Sat, 5/3/11, ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...> wrote:

From: ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...>
Subject: [isoss] FW: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)
To: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
Date: Saturday, 5 March, 2011, 6:22

 

 

 

From: IT MANAGER ISOSS [mailto:it-manager@...]
Sent: Saturday, March 05, 2011 5:06 PM
To: ISOSS Headquarters; Shahjahan.Khan@...; drmunir@...; hanif@...
Subject: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)

 

Dear Sir

 

How are you I hope that you will be fine by the blessings of God .

 

Sir , according to your guidance we had re-modified the ISOSS website on priority basis and now the updated website has launched (all programming bugs fixed) so please visit the website and give us your valuable feedbacks for its further improvement .

 

New features of website :

 

1-      Excellent UPLINK time  (Loading fast)

2-      Live Support 24/7 (Monday to Saturday) with automatic ticket generated system for every request

3-      Automatic follow – up to the pending requests

4-      Latest GEO-IP technology is working at back-end (This will helpful to collect data, that from which country how many users are visiting our website due to their interests in STATISTICS)

5-      Online proceedings panel

6-      Online conferences announcements/news

7-      ISOSS NEWS ROOM (ONLINE) at Face of Website (Auto updates)

8-      Online requests/Feedbacks submit panel (Auto Ticket Generated System at back end)

9-      Better re-fresh rate (Website Engine)

10-   Blocked all unauthorized spiders(search engines)

11-   Easy availability for YAHOO,GOOGLE,MSN,ALTAVISTA, spiders

12-   Easy – TO- View Photo section (Conferences Coverage)

13-   Auto back-ups of databases regarding website

14-   No Downtime of website

 

 

The above mentioned updates are working properly and I.T Department tried its best to done this task as soon as possible .

 

Waiting your feedbacks

 

Regards

 

--------

Muhammad Afnan

I.T Manager

ISOSS , Lahore

Pakistan

Contact:+92-332-4715946





#1520 From: CHAUDARY MUHAMMAD AFNAN <chaudary_afnan@...>
Date: Tue Mar 8, 2011 5:14 pm
Subject: Re: FW: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)
chaudary_afnan
Send Email Send Email
 
Thanks for your feedbacks
 
Regards

-------
Muhammad Afnan
I.T Manager
I.T Department ISOSS
Lahore , Pakistan
Facebook (ISOSS) :
Click Here
Twitter (ISOSS) : Click Here
Facebook (Personal):Click Here

 

 


--- On Tue, 8/3/11, Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...> wrote:

From: Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...>
Subject: Re: [isoss] FW: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)
To: isoss@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tuesday, 8 March, 2011, 22:12

 

Keep it up.
 
Wish you best of Luck,
 
Regards,
 
Mehwish Hussain
 

--- On Tue, 8/3/11, CHAUDARY MUHAMMAD AFNAN <chaudary_afnan@...> wrote:

From: CHAUDARY MUHAMMAD AFNAN <chaudary_afnan@...>
Subject: Re: [isoss] FW: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)
To: isoss@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tuesday, 8 March, 2011, 5:55

 
Dear Member (Miss. Mehwish)
 
Thanks for your suggestion we are working in Live Media console in which you will be able to see news / updates with smooth edges fonts so in some days we will launced it. The development/modification is still continous on priority basis
 
We are waiting your kind suggestions/Feedbacks  regardings ISOSS website
 
Regards
 
-------
Muhammad Afnan
I.T Manager
I.T Department ISOSS
Lahore , Pakistan
Facebook (ISOSS) :
Click Here
Twitter (ISOSS) : Click Here
Facebook (Personal):Click Here

 

 


--- On Tue, 8/3/11, Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...> wrote:

From: Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...>
Subject: Re: [isoss] FW: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)
To: isoss@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tuesday, 8 March, 2011, 14:03

 
I want to suggest one thing.
 
The news (topside), Announcements (Right side) and famous statistician names (Bottom side) should be crawled bit slow. Also, the font or transition effect of news (topside) and statisticians (bottom side) is quite sharp edged. Please, either change the font or smooth the transition effect.

I am not much expert in computer graphics etc. What I felt, I expressed. Please accept my apology in advance, if it doesn't on computer graphics range.
 

--- On Sat, 5/3/11, ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...> wrote:

From: ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...>
Subject: [isoss] FW: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)
To: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
Date: Saturday, 5 March, 2011, 6:22

 

 

 

From: IT MANAGER ISOSS [mailto:it-manager@...]
Sent: Saturday, March 05, 2011 5:06 PM
To: ISOSS Headquarters; Shahjahan.Khan@...; drmunir@...; hanif@...
Subject: updated ISOSS website (I.T Department ISOSS)

 

Dear Sir

 

How are you I hope that you will be fine by the blessings of God .

 

Sir , according to your guidance we had re-modified the ISOSS website on priority basis and now the updated website has launched (all programming bugs fixed) so please visit the website and give us your valuable feedbacks for its further improvement .

 

New features of website :

 

1-      Excellent UPLINK time  (Loading fast)

2-      Live Support 24/7 (Monday to Saturday) with automatic ticket generated system for every request

3-      Automatic follow – up to the pending requests

4-      Latest GEO-IP technology is working at back-end (This will helpful to collect data, that from which country how many users are visiting our website due to their interests in STATISTICS)

5-      Online proceedings panel

6-      Online conferences announcements/news

7-      ISOSS NEWS ROOM (ONLINE) at Face of Website (Auto updates)

8-      Online requests/Feedbacks submit panel (Auto Ticket Generated System at back end)

9-      Better re-fresh rate (Website Engine)

10-   Blocked all unauthorized spiders(search engines)

11-   Easy availability for YAHOO,GOOGLE,MSN,ALTAVISTA, spiders

12-   Easy – TO- View Photo section (Conferences Coverage)

13-   Auto back-ups of databases regarding website

14-   No Downtime of website

 

 

The above mentioned updates are working properly and I.T Department tried its best to done this task as soon as possible .

 

Waiting your feedbacks

 

Regards

 

--------

Muhammad Afnan

I.T Manager

ISOSS , Lahore

Pakistan

Contact:+92-332-4715946






#1521 From: CHAUDARY MUHAMMAD AFNAN <chaudary_afnan@...>
Date: Wed Mar 9, 2011 7:36 am
Subject: Scrolling Text (Fixed) (I.T Department ISOSS)
chaudary_afnan
Send Email Send Email
 
Dear Members
 
The scrolling text at ISOSS website has been fixed.The text is now moving slow with easy reading view and soft edges
 
Thanks for your feedbacks for improvement of ISOSS website
Regards
 
-------
Muhammad Afnan
I.T Manager
I.T Department ISOSS
Lahore , Pakistan
Facebook (ISOSS) :
Click Here
Twitter (ISOSS) : Click Here
Facebook (Personal):Click Here

 

 


#1522 From: Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...>
Date: Wed Mar 9, 2011 4:17 pm
Subject: Re: Scrolling Text (Fixed) (I.T Department ISOSS)
mehvish.hussain
Send Email Send Email
 
yups, it seems alright.
 
Keep it up!
 
Mehwish Hussain

--- On Tue, 8/3/11, CHAUDARY MUHAMMAD AFNAN <chaudary_afnan@...> wrote:

From: CHAUDARY MUHAMMAD AFNAN <chaudary_afnan@...>
Subject: [isoss] Scrolling Text (Fixed) (I.T Department ISOSS)
To: isoss@yahoogroups.com, "Iftikhar Iftikhar Ahmed C.M" <secretary@...>, "isoss" <isosspk@...>
Date: Tuesday, 8 March, 2011, 23:36

 
Dear Members
 
The scrolling text at ISOSS website has been fixed.The text is now moving slow with easy reading view and soft edges
 
Thanks for your feedbacks for improvement of ISOSS website
Regards
 
-------
Muhammad Afnan
I.T Manager
I.T Department ISOSS
Lahore , Pakistan
Facebook (ISOSS) :
Click Here
Twitter (ISOSS) : Click Here
Facebook (Personal):Click Here

 

 



#1523 From: "Afnan" <chaudary_afnan@...>
Date: Wed Mar 9, 2011 6:47 pm
Subject: ISOSS TICKET SYSTEM
chaudary_afnan
Send Email Send Email
 

Dear Members

"ONLINE REQUESTS / QUERIES / PAPERS / FEEDBACKS"  submission form has been launched at this link

http://www.isoss.com.pk/onlinerequest.php   at ISOSS website with automatic acknowledgement  + ticket  system .

The acknowledgement and  ticket number will be emailed to you in your INBOX at the same time.

 

Thanks for your feedbacks

 

Regards

----

Muhammad Afnan

I.T. Manager

ISOSS, Lahore

Pakistan

Email:- it-manager@...

 


#1524 From: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
Date: Thu Mar 10, 2011 5:23 pm
Subject: FW: Taylor & Francis Now Publishing ASA Journals
secretary@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 

From: Taylor and Francis [mailto:mail.ljzpdyefjvzjeqslvj@...]
Sent: Thursday, March 10, 2011 10:01 PM
Subject: Taylor & Francis Now Publishing ASA Journals

 

Taylor and Francis

American Statistical Association and Taylor & Francis
Announce New Publishing Partnership

 

The American Statistical Association (ASA) and Taylor & Francis are pleased to announce a new publishing partnership between the two organizations. As of 2012, Taylor & Francis will publish six journals on behalf of the ASA:

  • Journal of the American Statistical Association (JASA)
  • The American Statistician (TAS)
  • Journal of Business & Economic Statistics (JBES)
  • Statistics in Biopharmaceutical Research (SBR)
  • Technometrics
  • Journal of Computer and Graphical Statistics (JCGS)

Through their new partnership, the ASA and Taylor & Francis aim to expand the global reach and readership of these publications, to achieve the highest possible levels of accessibility through rapid publication and continued affordable pricing, and to maintain the high quality of the publications' content and presentation.

According to Kevin Bradley, President, Taylor & Francis USA, "I am extremely pleased and proud to be working with the American Statistical Association and to welcome these excellent publications into the T&F family. The high quality of the ASA titles, combined with T&F's outstanding production and author services and our global marketing and sales reach, will certainly make fora winning partnership."

"Disseminating statistical research through journals is a key part of the ASA mission," said Ron Wasserstein, Executive Director. "The hard work and professionalism of our journal editors, associate editors, editorial collaborators, and authors in producing the highest quality statistical journals, combined with the global capacity and expertise of the Taylor & Francis team, will increase the reach of our journals, furthering the ASA's role in promoting the practice and profession of statistics."

 Click here to read the press release in its entirety.


About the American Statistical Association:

Headquartered in Alexandria, Virginia, the American Statistical Association is the world's largest community of statisticians and the second oldest continuously operating professional society in the United States. For additional information about the American Statistical Association, please visit the ADA web site at http://www.amstat.org or call 703.684.1221.

eUpdates logoIf you would like to receive regular eUpdates from the Taylor & Francis Group on books, journals and other news within your areas of interest, please register your email address.

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#1525 From: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
Date: Thu Mar 10, 2011 5:27 pm
Subject: FW: Chelum of Dr. A. H. Baloch
secretary@...
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From: Kamal Hussain Baloch [mailto:hussain@...]
Sent: Thursday, March 10, 2011 9:55 PM
To: hussain@...
Subject: Chelum of Dr. A. H. Baloch

 

I, on the behalf of everyone in my family, would like to thank you all for your kind messages. It is heartening  to know that people remember our father in good words. I am sure he was as great a friend, teacher or mentor as he was a father.  He had very fond memories of his friends and his students and he would often go down the memory lane with me. He took a lot of pride in his profession, his contributions to the statistics and being a good father. Even though he is gone, his memory and legacy will linger on.

 

My father passed away on Feb 22nd, 2011 in his sleep. In a month or so prior to his demise he had lost a lot of weight but very through check-ups revealed nothing significant. Doctors, just like all the family members, were confident that he would get well and he was, indeed, recovering fast. So, his death is as much a shock to the family as it is to those who did not know about his physical frailty.

 

The family has decided to hold the “Chelum” on March 27th, 2011. We would request those of you, who will be available, to join us. In any case, please remember my father in your prayers.

 

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Dr. Kamal Hussain Baloch
Research Associate
Cumings Group
University of Maryland-College Park
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#1526 From: Shahjahan Khan <shahjahan.khan@...>
Date: Fri Mar 11, 2011 5:34 am
Subject: Lecturer in Statistics Position at USQ
drshahjahankhan
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Dear All,

Please see the ad below for a lecture (level B) position in Statistics at USQ.

You may feel free to forward this message to any potential applicants.

 

Best wishes,

 

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Statistics Discipline Coordinator

Department of Mathematics & Commputing, University of Southern Queensland

Toowoomba, Qld. 4350, Australia

Chief Editor, Journal of Applied Probability & Statistics (JAPS), USA

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0111337B             Lecturer in Statistics, Faculty of Sciences (Toowoomba)

To view these advertisements and obtain the position descriptions and apply please view the Careers at USQ Website.

If you require further information, please contact Human Resources Reception on (07) 4631 2663 and your call will be directed to the relevant Client Services Team.

 

Lecturer in Statistics

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Salary:USQ Academic level B $71 119 to $84 060 pa

 

Applications are invited for a continuing academic position to deliver high quality teaching of university level statistics.

 

Experience in teaching applied statistics to undergraduates is essential, and expertise in teaching non-specialists will be highly regarded. In addition to excellent written and verbal communication skills, the successful applicant will have a demonstrated capability to contribute to research activities and a capacity to clearly explain statistical concepts and techniques to higher degree students and early career researchers.

 

Candidates will be expected to have a higher degree relevant to the position.

 

This position is ideal for a recent PhD graduate wishing to build an academic career in a supportive environment with a pleasant life-work balance.

 

 

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#1528 From: "Afnan" <chaudary_afnan@...>
Date: Fri Mar 11, 2011 12:17 pm
Subject: upgradation in Live Chat Console (I.T Department ISOSS)
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Dear Members

The Live Chat Console at ISOSS website will be down on 12 -03-2011 To 13-03-2011 (9:00 Am) and will be re-launched on 13-03-2011 (12:00 Am) during these maintenance days Live Chat will not available but Request Form at website will be available. We will try to upgrade it in the assigned time on priority basis.

Sorry for inconvenience caused during these days.

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#1529 From: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
Date: Fri Mar 11, 2011 3:32 pm
Subject: FW: {EU} Call for Paper-Journal of Pakistan Medical Students.
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From: events_updates@yahoogroups.com [mailto:events_updates@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Jpms Office
Sent: Tuesday, March 08, 2011 4:41 PM
To: events_updates@yahoogroups.com
Subject: {EU} Call for Paper-Journal of Pakistan Medical Students.

 

 

Journal of Pakistan Medical Students

It’s the first medical student journal of Pakistan which is a peer reviewed, open access journal. It’s an initiative from the medical students of Pakistan with a team of dedicated national and international students with solid research background. It aims to promote research in Pakistan. Join us and work with us not for us. JPMS is looking for your contributions. Work with us and/or write for this peer reviewed journal to improve your CV to get better chances for securing a bright career locally and abroad. Anyone from across the globe can submit articles. Being from Pakistan and being a med student is not essential.

 

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#1530 From: Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...>
Date: Sat Mar 12, 2011 5:03 pm
Subject: Fw: Tips for Earth Quake Safety
mehvish.hussain
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--- On Fri, 11/3/11, Mehwish Hussain <mehvish.hussain28@...> wrote:

From: Mehwish Hussain <mehvish.hussain28@...>
Subject: Tips for Earth Quake Safety
To: "Mehvish Hussain" <mehvish.hussain@...>
Date: Friday, 11 March, 2011, 9:07



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Mehwish Hussain <mehvish.hussain28@...>
Date: Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 10:05 PM
Subject: Tips for Earth Quake Safety
To: Mehwish Hussain <mehvish.hussain28@...>




 
 
May Allah Save Us......
 



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Mehwish Hussain




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Mehwish Hussain



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#1531 From: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
Date: Sun Mar 13, 2011 7:46 am
Subject: Re: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor
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Subject: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor

http://alpha2.infim.ro/~ltpd/Jo_rankingb.htm

Impact Factor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The impact factor, often abbreviated IF, is a measure reflecting the average number of citations to articles published in science and social science journals. It is frequently used as a proxy for the relative importance of a journal within its field, with journals with higher impact factors deemed to be more important than those with lower ones. The impact factor was devised by Eugene Garfield, the founder of the Institute for Scientific Information (ISI), now part of Thomson Reuters. Impact factors are calculated yearly for those journals that are indexed in Thomson Reuter's Journal Citation Reports.

Contents

 [hide]

·         1 Calculation

·         2 Use

·         3 Criticisms

o    3.1 Validity

o    3.2 Editorial policies which alter the impact factor

o    3.3 Incorrect application of impact factor

o    3.4 Responses

·         4 Other measures of impact

o    4.1 Related indices

o    4.2 PageRank algorithm

o    4.3 Article level metrics

·         5 See also

·         6 References

·         7 External links

[edit]Calculation

In a given year, the impact factor of a journal is the average number of citations received per paper published in that journal during the two preceding years.[1] For example, if a journal has an impact factor of 3 in 2008, then its papers published in 2006 and 2007 received 3 citations each on average. The 2008 impact factor of a journal would be calculated as follows:

A = the number of times articles published in 2006 and 2007 were cited by indexed journals during 2008

B = the total number of "citable items" published by that journal in 2006 and 2007. ("Citable items" are usually articles, reviews, proceedings, or notes; not editorials or Letters-to-the-Editor.)

2008 impact factor = A/B

(Note that 2008 impact factors are actually published in 2009; they cannot be calculated until all of the 2008 publications have been processed by the indexing agency.)

New journals, which are indexed from their first published issue, will receive an impact factor after two years of indexing; in this case, the citations to the year prior to Volume 1, and the number of articles published in the year prior to Volume 1 are known zero values. Journals that are indexed starting with a volume other than the first volume will not get an impact factor until they have been indexed for three years. Annuals and other irregular publications sometimes publish no items in a particular year, affecting the count. The impact factor relates to a specific time period; it is possible to calculate it for any desired period, and the Journal Citation Reports (JCR) also includes a 5-year impact factor.[2] The JCR shows rankings of journals by impact factor, if desired by discipline, such asorganic chemistry or psychiatry.

[edit]Use

The IF is used to compare different journals within a certain field. The ISI Web of Knowledge indexes more than 11,000 science and social science journals[3] and the results are widely available[citation needed].

[edit]Criticisms

Numerous criticisms have been made of the use of an impact factor, including the more general debate on the usefulness of citation metrics. Criticisms mainly concern the validity of the impact factor, policies that alter it, and its incorrect application.[4]

[edit]Validity

§  The impact factor is highly discipline-dependent. The percentage of total citations occurring in the first two years after publication varies highly among disciplines from 1-3 percent in the mathematical and physical sciences to 5-8 percent in the biological sciences.[5]

§  The impact factor could not be reproduced in an independent audit[6] (but see Thomson Scientific's reply[7]).

§  The impact factor refers to the average number of citations per paper, but this is not a normal distribution. It is rather a Bradford distribution, as predicted by theory. Being an arithmetic mean, the impact factor therefore is not a valid representation of this distribution and unfit for citation evaluation.[8]

§  In the short term - especially in the case of low-impact-factor journals - many of the citations to a certain article are made in papers written by the author(s) of the original article.[9] This means that counting citations may be independent of the real “impact” of the work among investigators. Garfield, however, maintains that this phenomenon hardly influences a journal's impact factor.[10]However, a study of author self-citations in diabetes literature found that the frequency of author self-citation was not associated with the quality of publications.[11] Similarly, journal self-citation is common in journals dealing in specialized topics having high overlap in readership and authors, and is not necessarily a sign of low quality or manipulation.[12]

[edit]Editorial policies which alter the impact factor

A journal can adopt editorial policies that increase its impact factor.[13][14] These editorial policies are not necessarily correlated with improving the quality of published scientific work.

§  Journals may publish a larger percentage of review articles which generally are cited more than research reports.[citation needed] Therefore review articles can raise the impact factor of the journal and review journals will therefore often have the highest impact factors in their respective fields.

§  Journals may change the fraction of "citable items" compared to front-matter in the denominator of the IF equation. Which types of articles are considered "citable" is largely a matter of negotiation between journals and Thomson Scientific. As a result of such negotiations, impact factor variations of more than 300% have been observed.[15] For instance, editorials in a journal are not considered to be citable items and therefore do not enter into the denominator of the impact factor. However, citations to such items will still enter into the numerator, thereby inflating the impact factor. In addition, if such items cite other articles (often even from the same journal), those citations will be counted and will increase the citation count for the cited journal. This effect is hard to evaluate, for the distinction between editorial comment and short original articles is not always obvious. "Letters to the editor" might refer to either class.

§  Several methods, not necessarily with nefarious intent, exist for a journal to cite articles in the same journal which will increase the journal's impact factor.[16][17]

§  In 2007, a specialist journal with an impact factor of 0.66 published an editorial that cited all its articles from 2005 to 2006 in a protest against the absurd use of the impact factor.[18] The large number of citations meant that the impact factor for that journal increased to 1.44. As a result of the increase, the journal was not included in the 2008 and 2009 Journal Citation Report.[19]

§  In 2008 a single article "A short history of SHELX", included a sentence that essentially instructs readers to cite the paper: "This paper could serve as a general literature citation when one or more of the open-source SHELX programs (and the Bruker AXS version SHELXTL) are employed in the course of a crystal-structure determination". This article received more than 6,600 citations. As a consequence, the impact factor of the journal Acta Crystallographica Section A rose from 2.051 in 2008 to 49.926 in 2009, more than Nature (31.434) and Science (28.103).[20] The second most cited article in Acta Crystallographica Section A in 2008 had only 28 citations.[21]

[edit]Incorrect application of impact factor

§  The IF may be incorrectly applied to evaluate the significance of an individual publication or to evaluate an individual researcher.[22]

This does not work well since a small number of publications are cited much more than the majority - for example, about 90% of Nature's 2004 impact factor was based on only a quarter of its publications, and thus the importance of any one publication will be different from, and in most cases less than, the overall number.[23] The impact factor, however, averages over all articles and thus underestimates the citations of the most cited articles while exaggerating the number of citations of the majority of articles. Consequently, the Higher Education Funding Council for Englandwas urged by the House of Commons Science and Technology Select Committee to remind Research Assessment Exercise panels that they are obliged to assess the quality of the content of individual articles, not the reputation of the journal in which they are published.[24]

[edit]Responses

§  Because “the impact factor is not always a reliable instrument” in November 2007 the European Association of Science Editors (EASE) issued an official statement recommending “that journal impact factors are used only - and cautiously - for measuring and comparing the influence of entire journals, but not for the assessment of single papers, and certainly not for the assessment of researchers or research programmes."[4]

§  In July 2008, the International Council for Science (ICSU) Committee on Freedom and Responsibility in the conduct of Science (CFRS) issued a "Statement on publication practices and indices and the role of peer review in research assessment", suggesting some possible solutions, e.g. considering penalising scientists for an excessive number of publications per year.[25]

§  In February 2010, the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Foundation for Science) published new guidelines to evaluate only articles and no bibliometric information on candidates to be evaluated in all decisions concerning "...performance-based funding allocations, postdoctoral qualifications, appointments, or reviewing funding proposals, [where] increasing importance has been given to numerical indicators such as the H-index and the impact factor."[26] This decision follows similar ones of the National Science Foundation (US) or the Research Assessment Exercise(UK).[citation needed]

[edit]Other measures of impact

[edit]Related indices

Some related values, also calculated and published by the same organization, are:

§  the immediacy index: the number of citations the articles in a journal receive in a given year divided by the number of articles published.

§  the cited half-life: the median age of the articles that were cited in Journal Citation Reports each year. For example, if a journal's half-life in 2005 is 5, that means the citations from 2001-2005 are half of all the citations from that journal in 2005, and the other half of the citations precede 2001.[27]

§  the aggregate impact factor for a subject category: it is calculated taking into account the number of citations to all journals in the subject category and the number of articles from all the journals in the subject category.

These measures apply only to journals, not individual articles or individual scientists (unlike the H-index). The relative number of citations an individual article receives is better viewed as citation impact.

It is, however, possible to measure the Impact factor of the journals in which a particular person has published articles. This use is widespread, but controversial. Garfield warns about the "misuse in evaluating individuals" because there is "a wide variation from article to article within a single journal".[10] Impact factors have a large, but controversial, influence on the way published scientific research is perceived and evaluated.

[edit]PageRank algorithm

In 1976 a recursive impact factor that gives citations from journals with high impact greater weight than citations from low-impact journals was proposed.[28] Such a recursive impact factor resembles thePageRank algorithm of the Google search engine, though the original Pinski and Narin paper uses a "trade balance" approach in which journals score highest when they are often cited but rarely cite other journals. A number of subsequent authors have proposed related approaches to ranking scholarly journals.[29][30][31] In 2006, Johan Bollen, Marko A. Rodriguez, and Herbert Van de Sompel also proposed using the PageRank algorithm.[32] From their paper:

ISI Impact Factor

PageRank

Combined

1

52.28

ANNU REV IMMUNOL

16.78

Nature

51.97

Nature

2

37.65

ANNU REV BIOCHEM

16.39

Journal of Biological Chemistry

48.78

Science

3

36.83

PHYSIOL REV

16.38

Science

19.84

New England Journal of Medicine

4

35.04

NAT REV MOL CELL BIO

14.49

PNAS

15.34

Cell

5

34.83

New England Journal of Medicine

8.41

PHYS REV LETT

14.88

PNAS

6

30.98

Nature

5.76

Cell

10.62

Journal of Biological Chemistry

7

30.55

Nature Medicine

5.70

New England Journal of Medicine

8.49

JAMA

8

29.78

Science

4.67

Journal of the American Chemical Society

7.78

The Lancet

9

28.18

NAT IMMUNOL

4.46

J IMMUNOL

7.56

NAT GENET

10

28.17

REV MOD PHYS

4.28

APPL PHYS LETT

6.53

Nature Medicine

The table shows the top 10 journals by ISI Impact Factor, PageRank, and a modified system that combines the two (based on 2003 data). Nature and Science are generally regarded as the most prestigious journals, and in the combined system they come out on top.

The Eigenfactor is another PageRank-type measure of journal influence,[33] with rankings freely available online.[34]

[edit]Article level metrics

Starting in March 2009, the Public Library of Science introduced "article level metrics[35] on every article in all of their titles.

[edit]See also

§  H-index, for the impact factor of individual scientists, rather than journals.

§  PageRank, the algorithm used by Google, based on similar principles.

§  Eigenfactor, another journal citation ranking method.

§  SCImago Journal Rank, an open access journal metric which is based on Scopus data and uses an algorithm similar to PageRank.

§  Lowry protein assay paper by Oliver Lowry - one of the most cited papers in the scientific literature (cited over 200,000 times).

[edit]References

1.     ^ "Introducing the Impact Factor". Retrieved 2009-08-26.

2.     ^ "JCR with Eigenfactor". Retrieved 2009-08-26.

3.     ^ "Web of Knowledge > Real Facts > Quality and Quantity". Retrieved 2010-05-05.

4.     a b "European Association of Science Editors statement on impact factors". Retrieved 2009-03-25.

5.     ^ Erjen van Nierop (2009). "Why do statistics journals have low impact factors?"Statistica Neerlandica 63 (1): 52–62.doi:10.1111/j.1467-9574.2008.00408.x.

6.     ^ Mike Rossner, Heather Van Epps, and Emma Hill (December 17, 2007). "Show me the data". Journal of Cell Biology.

7.     ^ "Thomson Scientific Corrects Inaccuracies In Editorial - Citation Impact Center - Thomson Reuters Forums". Retrieved 2009-08-31.

8.     ^ Joint Committee on Quantitative Assessment of Research (June 12, 2008). "Citation Statistics" (PDF). International Mathematical Union.

9.     ^ S.A. Marashi. On the identity of “citers”: are papers promptly recognized by other investigators? (2005) Med. Hypotheses 65, 822. PubMed 15990244.

10.   a b Eugene Garfield (June 1998). "The Impact Factor and Using It Correctly"Der Unfallchirurg 101 (6): 413–414.PMID 9677838.

11.   ^ Gami AS, Montori VM, Wilczynski NL, Haynes RB (2004)."Author self-citation in the diabetes literature"CMAJ 170(13): 1925–7. doi:10.1503/cmaj.1031879PMC 421720.PMID 15210641.

12.   ^ Natasa Kovacic and Aleksandra Misak (2004). "Author self-citation in medical literature"CMAJ 170 (13): 1929–30.doi:10.1503/cmaj.1040513.

13.   ^ Richard Monastersky (October 14, 2005). "The Number That's Devouring Science". The Chronicle of Higher Education.

14.   ^ Douglas N. Arnold; Kristine K. Fowler (2011). "Nefarious Numbers". Notices of the American Mathematical Society 58(3): 434-437. arXiv:1010.0278.

15.   ^ PLoS Medicine Editors (June 6, 2006). "The Impact Factor Game"PLoS Medicine (PLoS Medicine) 3 (6): e291.doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0030291PMC 1475651.PMID 16749869.

16.   ^ Agrawal A (2005). "Corruption of Journal Impact Factors".Trends in Ecology and Evolution 20 (4): 157.doi:10.1016/j.tree.2005.02.002PMID 16701362.

17.   ^ Fassoulaki A, Papilas K, Paraskeva A, Patris K (2002). "Impact factor bias and proposed adjustments for its determination". Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica 46 (7): 902–5. doi:10.1034/j.1399-6576.2002.460723.x.PMID 12139549.

18.   ^ Harm K. Schuttea, Jan G. Svec (2007). "Reaction of Folia Phoniatrica et Logopaedica on the Current Trend of Impact Factor Measures". Folia Phoniatrica et Logopaedica 59 (6): 281–285. doi:10.1159/000108334PMID 17965570.

19.   ^ "Journal Citation Reports - Notices". Retrieved 2009-09-24.

20.   ^ New impact factors yield surprises - The Scientist - Magazine of the Life Sciences

21.   ^ What does it mean to be #2 in Impact? - Thomson Reuters Community

22.   ^ Seglen PO (1997). "Why the impact factor of journals should not be used for evaluating research"BMJ 314 (7079): 498–502. PMC 2126010PMID 9056804. Free PDF download for the public.

23.   ^ "Not-so-deep impact" (This editorial is available free of charge.). Nature 435 (7045): 1003–4. June 23, 2005.doi:10.1038/4351003bPMID 15973362.

24.   ^ "House of Commons - Science and Technology - Tenth Report". 2004-07-07. Retrieved 2008-07-28.

25.   ^ International Council for Science statement

26.   ^ DFG press release (http://www.dfg.de/en/service/press/press_releases/2010/pressemitteilung_nr_07/index.html)

27.   ^ Impact Factor, Immediacy Index, Cited Half-life

28.   ^ Gabriel Pinski and Francis Narin (1976). "Citation influence for journal aggregates of scientific publications: Theory with application to literature of physics". Information Processing & Management 12: 297–312. doi:10.1016/0306-4573(76)90048-0.

29.   ^ S. J. Liebowitz and J. P. Palmer. (1984). "Assessing the relative impacts of economics journals"Journal of Economic Literature (American Economic Association) 22 (1): 77–88.

30.   ^ I. Palacios-Huerta and O. Volij (2004). "The measurement of intellectual influence". Econometrica 72: 963–977.doi:10.1111/j.1468-0262.2004.00519.x.

31.   ^ Y. K. Kodrzycki and P. D. Yu (2006). "New approaches to ranking economics journals". B. E. Journal of Economics Analysis and Policy 5doi:10.2202/1538-0645.1520.

32.   ^ Johan Bollen, Marko A. Rodriguez, and Herbert Van de Sompel. (December 2006). "Journal Status"Scientometrics69 (3).

33.   ^ C. T. Bergstrom. (May 2007). "Eigenfactor: Measuring the value and prestige of scholarly journals"College & Research Libraries News 68 (5).

34.   ^ eigenfactor.org

35.   ^ Article-Level Metrics Information

[edit]External links

§  List of ranking and impact factor by Sci-Bytes

§  "Journal Citation Reports". Retrieved 2009-07-18.

§  Does the 'Impact Factor' Impact Decisions on Where to Publish?American Physical Society. Accessed: 2010-07=10.

§  2008 statement on inappropriate use of impact factors, published by the European Association of Science Editors

§  UK science will be judged by peer review. Nature 468, 357. November 17, 2010 Gilbert, Natasha (2010). "UK science will be judged on impact". Nature 468: 357. doi:10.1038/468357a.PMID 21085146.

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#1532 From: Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...>
Date: Sun Mar 13, 2011 4:20 pm
Subject: Re: Re: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor [1 Attachment]
mehvish.hussain
Send Email Send Email
 
 
Really informative.

What is the impact factor of Pakistan Journal of Statistics (PJS)?

Regards,
 
Mehwish Hussain
 

--- On Sat, 12/3/11, ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...> wrote:

> From: ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...>
> Subject: [isoss] Re: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor [1 Attachment]
> To: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
> Date: Saturday, 12 March, 2011, 23:46
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>  
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> [Attachment(s) from ISOSS Headquarters
> included below]
>
>
>    Subject:
> http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factorhttp://alpha2.infim.ro/~ltpd/Jo_rankingb.htm
> Impact
> FactorFrom Wikipedia, the
> free encyclopediaThe impact
> factor, often abbreviated IF, is a measure
> reflecting the average number of citations to
> articles published in science and
> social science journals. It is frequently used as
> a proxy for
> the relative importance of a journal within its field, with
> journals with higher impact factors deemed to be more
> important than those with lower ones. The impact factor was
> devised by Eugene
> Garfield, the founder of the Institute for
> Scientific Information (ISI), now part
> of Thomson
> Reuters. Impact factors are calculated yearly for
> those journals that are indexed in Thomson
> Reuter's Journal Citation
> Reports.Contents [hide]·        
> 1 Calculation·        
> 2 Use·        
> 3 Criticismso   
> 3.1 Validityo   
> 3.2 Editorial policies which alter
> the impact factoro   
> 3.3 Incorrect application of impact
> factoro   
> 3.4 Responses·        
> 4 Other measures of
> impacto   
> 4.1 Related
> indiceso   
> 4.2 PageRank
> algorithmo   
> 4.3 Article level
> metrics·        
> 5 See
> also·        
> 6 References·        
> 7 External
> links[edit]CalculationIn a given year, the
> impact factor of a journal is the average number of
> citations received per paper published in that journal
> during the two preceding years.[1] For
> example, if a journal has an impact factor of 3 in 2008,
> then its papers published in 2006 and 2007 received 3
> citations each on average. The 2008 impact factor of a
> journal would be calculated as follows:A = the number of
> times articles published in 2006 and 2007 were cited by
> indexed journals during 2008B = the total
> number of "citable items" published by that
> journal in 2006 and 2007. ("Citable items" are
> usually articles, reviews, proceedings, or notes; not
> editorials or Letters-to-the-Editor.)2008 impact factor
> = A/B(Note that 2008 impact
> factors are actually published in 2009; they cannot be
> calculated until all of the 2008 publications have been
> processed by the indexing agency.)New journals, which are
> indexed from their first published issue, will receive an
> impact factor after two years of indexing; in this case, the
> citations to the year prior to Volume 1, and the number of
> articles published in the year prior to Volume 1 are known
> zero values. Journals that are indexed starting with a
> volume other than the first volume will not get an impact
> factor until they have been indexed for three years. Annuals
> and other irregular publications sometimes publish no items
> in a particular year, affecting the count. The impact factor
> relates to a specific time period; it is possible to
> calculate it for any desired period, and the Journal
> Citation Reports (JCR) also includes a 5-year
> impact factor.[2] The
> JCR shows rankings of journals by impact factor, if desired
> by discipline, such asorganic
> chemistry or psychiatry.[edit]UseThe IF is used to
> compare different journals within a certain field.
> The ISI Web of
> Knowledge indexes more than 11,000 science
> and social science journals[3] and
> the results are widely available[citation
> needed].[edit]CriticismsNumerous criticisms
> have been made of the use of an impact factor, including the
> more general debate on the usefulness of citation metrics.
> Criticisms mainly concern the validity of the impact factor,
> policies that alter it, and its incorrect application.[4][edit]Validity§  The impact factor is
> highly discipline-dependent. The percentage of total
> citations occurring in the first two years after publication
> varies highly among disciplines from 1-3 percent in the
> mathematical and physical sciences to 5-8 percent in the
> biological sciences.[5]§  The impact factor could
> not be reproduced in an independent audit[6] (but
> see Thomson Scientific's reply[7]).§  The impact factor
> refers to the average number of citations per paper, but
> this is not a normal
> distribution. It is rather a Bradford
> distribution, as predicted by theory. Being
> an arithmetic
> mean, the impact factor therefore is not a valid
> representation of this distribution and unfit for citation
> evaluation.[8]§  In the short term -
> especially in the case of low-impact-factor journals - many
> of the citations to a certain article are made in papers
> written by the author(s) of the original article.[9] This
> means that counting citations may be independent of the real
> “impact” of the work among investigators. Garfield,
> however, maintains that this phenomenon hardly influences a
> journal's impact factor.[10]However,
> a study of author self-citations in diabetes literature
> found that the frequency of author self-citation was not
> associated with the quality of publications.[11] Similarly,
> journal self-citation is common in journals dealing in
> specialized topics having high overlap in readership and
> authors, and is not necessarily a sign of low quality or
> manipulation.[12][edit]Editorial policies
> which alter the impact factorA journal can adopt
> editorial policies that increase its impact factor.[13][14] These
> editorial policies are not necessarily correlated with
> improving the quality of published scientific
> work.§  Journals may publish a
> larger percentage of review articles which generally are
> cited more than research reports.[citation
> needed] Therefore review articles
> can raise the impact factor of the journal and review
> journals will therefore often have the highest impact
> factors in their respective fields.§  Journals may change the
> fraction of "citable items" compared to
> front-matter in the denominator of the IF equation. Which
> types of articles are considered "citable" is
> largely a matter of negotiation between journals and Thomson
> Scientific. As a result of such negotiations, impact factor
> variations of more than 300% have been observed.[15] For
> instance, editorials in a journal are not considered to be
> citable items and therefore do not enter into the
> denominator of the impact factor. However, citations to such
> items will still enter into the numerator, thereby inflating
> the impact factor. In addition, if such items cite other
> articles (often even from the same journal), those
> citations will be counted and will increase
> the citation count for the cited journal. This effect is
> hard to evaluate, for the distinction between editorial
> comment and short original articles is not always obvious.
> "Letters to the editor" might refer to either
> class.§  Several methods, not
> necessarily with nefarious intent, exist for a journal to
> cite articles in the same journal which will increase the
> journal's impact factor.[16][17]§  In 2007, a specialist
> journal with an impact factor of 0.66 published an editorial
> that cited all its articles from 2005 to 2006 in a protest
> against the absurd use of the impact factor.[18] The
> large number of citations meant that the impact factor for
> that journal increased to 1.44. As a result of the increase,
> the journal was not included in the 2008 and 2009 Journal
> Citation Report.[19]§  In 2008 a single
> article "A short history of SHELX", included a
> sentence that essentially instructs readers to cite the
> paper: "This paper could serve as a general literature
> citation when one or more of the open-source SHELX programs
> (and the Bruker AXS version SHELXTL) are employed in the
> course of a crystal-structure determination". This
> article received more than 6,600 citations. As a
> consequence, the impact factor of the journal Acta
> Crystallographica Section A rose from 2.051 in 2008
> to 49.926 in 2009, more
> than Nature (31.434)
> and Science (28.103).[20] The
> second most cited article in Acta Crystallographica
> Section A in 2008 had only 28 citations.[21][edit]Incorrect application
> of impact factor§  The IF may be
> incorrectly applied to evaluate the significance of an
> individual publication or to evaluate an individual
> researcher.[22]This does not work well
> since a small number of publications are cited much more
> than the majority - for example, about 90% of Nature's
> 2004 impact factor was based on only a quarter of its
> publications, and thus the importance of any one publication
> will be different from, and in most cases less than, the
> overall number.[23] The
> impact factor, however, averages over all articles and thus
> underestimates the citations of the most cited articles
> while exaggerating the number of citations of the majority
> of articles. Consequently, the Higher Education
> Funding Council for Englandwas urged by
> the House of
> Commons Science and
> Technology Select Committee to
> remind Research
> Assessment Exercise panels that they are
> obliged to assess the quality of the content of individual
> articles, not the reputation of the journal in which they
> are published.[24][edit]Responses§  Because “the impact
> factor is not always a reliable instrument” in November
> 2007 the European
> Association of Science Editors (EASE) issued
> an official statement recommending “that journal impact
> factors are used only - and cautiously - for measuring and
> comparing the influence of entire journals, but not for the
> assessment of single papers, and certainly not for the
> assessment of researchers or research programmes."[4]§  In July 2008,
> the International
> Council for Science (ICSU) Committee on
> Freedom and Responsibility in the conduct of Science (CFRS)
> issued a "Statement on publication practices and
> indices and the role of peer review in research
> assessment", suggesting some possible solutions, e.g.
> considering penalising scientists for an excessive number of
> publications per year.[25]§  In February 2010,
> the Deutsche
> Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Foundation
> for Science) published new guidelines to evaluate only
> articles and no bibliometric information on candidates to be
> evaluated in all decisions concerning
> "...performance-based funding allocations, postdoctoral
> qualifications, appointments, or reviewing funding
> proposals, [where] increasing importance has been given to
> numerical indicators such as the H-index and the impact
> factor."[26] This
> decision follows similar ones of the National Science
> Foundation (US) or the Research
> Assessment Exercise(UK).[citation
> needed][edit]Other
> measures of impact[edit]Related
> indicesSome related values,
> also calculated and published by the same organization,
> are:§  the immediacy
> index: the number of citations the articles in a
> journal receive in a given year divided by the number of
> articles published.§  the cited
> half-life: the median age of the articles that were
> cited in Journal Citation Reports each
> year. For example, if a journal's half-life in 2005 is
> 5, that means the citations from 2001-2005 are half of all
> the citations from that journal in 2005, and the other half
> of the citations precede 2001.[27]§  the aggregate
> impact factor for a subject category: it is
> calculated taking into account the number of citations to
> all journals in the subject category and the number of
> articles from all the journals in the subject
> category.These measures apply
> only to journals, not individual articles or individual
> scientists (unlike the H-index).
> The relative number of citations an individual article
> receives is better viewed as citation
> impact.It is, however,
> possible to measure the Impact factor of the journals in
> which a particular person has published articles. This use
> is widespread, but controversial. Garfield warns about the
> "misuse in evaluating individuals" because there
> is "a wide variation from article to article within a
> single journal".[10] Impact
> factors have a large, but controversial, influence on the
> way published scientific research is perceived and
> evaluated.[edit]PageRank
> algorithmIn 1976 a recursive
> impact factor that gives citations from journals with high
> impact greater weight than citations from low-impact
> journals was proposed.[28] Such
> a recursive impact factor resembles thePageRank algorithm
> of the Google search
> engine, though the original Pinski and Narin paper uses a
> "trade balance" approach in which journals score
> highest when they are often cited but rarely cite other
> journals. A number of subsequent authors have proposed
> related approaches to ranking scholarly journals.[29][30][31] In
> 2006, Johan Bollen, Marko A. Rodriguez, and Herbert Van de
> Sompel also proposed using the PageRank algorithm.[32] From
> their paper:ISI Impact
> FactorPageRankCombined152.28ANNU REV
> IMMUNOL16.78Nature51.97Nature237.65ANNU REV
> BIOCHEM16.39Journal of
> Biological Chemistry48.78Science336.83PHYSIOL
> REV16.38Science19.84New England
> Journal of Medicine435.04NAT REV MOL CELL
> BIO14.49PNAS15.34Cell534.83New England
> Journal of Medicine8.41PHYS REV
> LETT14.88PNAS630.98Nature5.76Cell10.62Journal of
> Biological Chemistry730.55Nature
> Medicine5.70New England
> Journal of Medicine8.49JAMA829.78Science4.67Journal of the
> American Chemical Society7.78The
> Lancet928.18NAT
> IMMUNOL4.46J
> IMMUNOL7.56NAT
> GENET1028.17REV MOD
> PHYS4.28APPL PHYS
> LETT6.53Nature
> MedicineThe table shows the top
> 10 journals by ISI Impact
> Factor, PageRank, and a modified system that combines the
> two (based on 2003 data). Nature and Science are
> generally regarded as the most prestigious journals, and in
> the combined system they come out on top.The Eigenfactor is
> another PageRank-type
> measure of journal influence,[33] with
> rankings freely available online.[34][edit]Article level
> metricsStarting in March 2009,
> the Public Library
> of Science introduced "article level
> metrics[35] on
> every article in all of their titles.[edit]See
> also§  H-index,
> for the impact factor of individual scientists, rather than
> journals.§  PageRank,
> the algorithm used by Google,
> based on similar principles.§  Eigenfactor,
> another journal citation ranking method.§  SCImago Journal
> Rank, an open access journal metric which is
> based on Scopus data and uses an algorithm similar to
> PageRank.§  Lowry protein
> assay paper by Oliver
> Lowry - one of the most cited papers in the
> scientific literature (cited over 200,000
> times).[edit]References1.    
> ^ "Introducing
> the Impact Factor". Retrieved
> 2009-08-26.2.    
> ^ "JCR with
> Eigenfactor". Retrieved
> 2009-08-26.3.    
> ^ "Web of
> Knowledge > Real Facts > Quality and
> Quantity". Retrieved
> 2010-05-05.4.    
> ^ a b "European
> Association of Science Editors statement on impact
> factors". Retrieved
> 2009-03-25.5.    
> ^ Erjen van Nierop
> (2009). "Why do
> statistics journals have low impact
> factors?". Statistica
> Neerlandica 63 (1): 52–62.doi:10.1111/j.1467-9574.2008.00408.x.6.    
> ^ Mike Rossner, Heather Van Epps,
> and Emma Hill (December 17, 2007). "Show me
> the data". Journal of Cell
> Biology.7.    
> ^ "Thomson
> Scientific Corrects Inaccuracies In Editorial - Citation
> Impact Center - Thomson Reuters
> Forums". Retrieved
> 2009-08-31.8.    
> ^ Joint Committee on Quantitative
> Assessment of Research (June 12, 2008). "Citation
> Statistics" (PDF). International
> Mathematical Union.9.    
> ^ S.A. Marashi. On
> the identity of “citers”: are papers promptly recognized
> by other investigators? (2005) Med. Hypotheses 65,
> 822. PubMed 15990244.10.   ^ a b Eugene Garfield (June
> 1998). "The Impact
> Factor and Using It Correctly". Der
> Unfallchirurg 101 (6): 413–414.PMID 9677838.11.  
> ^ Gami AS, Montori VM, Wilczynski
> NL, Haynes RB (2004)."Author
> self-citation in the diabetes
> literature". CMAJ 170(13):
> 1925–7. doi:10.1503/cmaj.1031879. PMC 421720.PMID 15210641.12.  
> ^ Natasa Kovacic and Aleksandra
> Misak (2004). "Author
> self-citation in medical
> literature". CMAJ 170 (13):
> 1929–30.doi:10.1503/cmaj.1040513.13.  
> ^ Richard Monastersky (October
> 14, 2005). "The Number
> That's Devouring Science". The Chronicle
> of Higher Education.14.  
> ^ Douglas N.
> Arnold; Kristine K. Fowler (2011).
> "Nefarious Numbers". Notices of the
> American Mathematical
> Society 58(3): 434-437. arXiv:1010.0278.15.  
> ^ PLoS Medicine Editors (June 6,
> 2006). "The Impact
> Factor Game". PLoS
> Medicine (PLoS Medicine) 3 (6):
> e291.doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0030291. PMC 1475651.PMID 16749869.16.  
> ^ Agrawal A (2005). "Corruption
> of Journal Impact Factors".Trends in
> Ecology and
> Evolution 20 (4): 157.doi:10.1016/j.tree.2005.02.002. PMID 16701362.17.  
> ^ Fassoulaki A, Papilas K,
> Paraskeva A, Patris K (2002). "Impact factor bias and
> proposed adjustments for its determination". Acta
> Anaesthesiologica
> Scandinavica 46 (7):
> 902–5. doi:10.1034/j.1399-6576.2002.460723.x.PMID 12139549.18.  
> ^ Harm K. Schuttea, Jan G. Svec
> (2007). "Reaction of Folia Phoniatrica et
> Logopaedica on the Current Trend of Impact Factor
> Measures". Folia
> Phoniatrica et
> Logopaedica 59 (6):
> 281–285. doi:10.1159/000108334. PMID 17965570.19.  
> ^ "Journal
> Citation Reports - Notices". Retrieved
> 2009-09-24.20.  
> ^ New impact
> factors yield surprises - The Scientist - Magazine of the
> Life Sciences21.  
> ^ What does it
> mean to be #2 in Impact? - Thomson Reuters
> Community22.  
> ^ Seglen PO (1997). "Why the
> impact factor of journals should not be used for evaluating
> research". BMJ 314 (7079):
> 498–502. PMC 2126010. PMID 9056804. Free
> PDF download for the public.23.  
> ^ "Not-so-deep
> impact" (This editorial is available
> free of
> charge.). Nature 435 (7045):
> 1003–4. June 23, 2005.doi:10.1038/4351003b. PMID 15973362.24.  
> ^ "House of
> Commons - Science and Technology - Tenth
> Report". 2004-07-07. Retrieved
> 2008-07-28.25.  
> ^ International
> Council for Science statement26.  
> ^ DFG press release
> (http://www.dfg.de/en/service/press/press_releases/2010/pressemitteilung_nr_07/index.html)27.  
> ^ Impact Factor,
> Immediacy Index, Cited Half-life28.  
> ^ Gabriel Pinski and Francis
> Narin (1976). "Citation influence for journal
> aggregates of scientific publications: Theory with
> application to literature of
> physics". Information Processing &
> Management 12: 297–312. doi:10.1016/0306-4573(76)90048-0.29.  
> ^ S. J. Liebowitz and J. P.
> Palmer. (1984). "Assessing
> the relative impacts of economics
> journals". Journal of Economic
> Literature (American Economic
> Association) 22 (1):
> 77–88.30.  
> ^ I. Palacios-Huerta and O. Volij
> (2004). "The measurement of intellectual
> influence". Econometrica 72:
> 963–977.doi:10.1111/j.1468-0262.2004.00519.x.31.  
> ^ Y. K. Kodrzycki and P. D. Yu
> (2006). "New approaches to ranking economics
> journals". B. E. Journal of Economics Analysis
> and Policy 5. doi:10.2202/1538-0645.1520.32.  
> ^ Johan Bollen, Marko A.
> Rodriguez, and Herbert Van de Sompel. (December
> 2006). "Journal
> Status". Scientometrics69 (3).33.  
> ^ C. T.
> Bergstrom. (May 2007). "Eigenfactor:
> Measuring the value and prestige of scholarly
> journals". College & Research
> Libraries
> News 68 (5).34.  
> ^ eigenfactor.org35.  
> ^ Article-Level
> Metrics Information[edit]External
> links§  List of ranking
> and impact factor by Sci-Bytes§  "Journal
> Citation Reports". Retrieved
> 2009-07-18.§  Does the
> 'Impact Factor' Impact Decisions on Where to
> Publish?, American
> Physical Society. Accessed:
> 2010-07=10.§  2008 statement
> on inappropriate use of impact factors, published
> by the European
> Association of Science Editors§  UK science will
> be judged by peer review. Nature 468, 357.
> November 17, 2010 Gilbert, Natasha (2010).
> "UK science will be judged on
> impact". Nature 468:
> 357. doi:10.1038/468357a.PMID 21085146.Categories: Bibliometrics | Academic
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#1533 From: Muhammad Iftikhar <isosspk@...>
Date: Sun Mar 13, 2011 5:54 pm
Subject: Re: Re: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor
isosspk
Send Email Send Email
 
Pakistan Journal of Statistics (PJS) has been selected for coverage in the Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE) and Web of Science (WoS) beginning with volume 24(1) 2008. Since three years’ worth of source item and citation data are required to compute an impact factor, and coverage of PJS began with the 2008 volume, the first impact factor will appear in the 2010 edition of the Journal Citation Reports (JCR) which will be published this time in June, 2011.

 

It can be checked through the following link: 

http://scientific.thomsonreuters.com/cgi-bin/jrnlst/jlresults.cgi?PC=MASTER&Full=pakistan%20journal%20of%20statistics

 

 


--- On Sun, 13/3/11, Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...> wrote:

From: Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...>
Subject: Re: [isoss] Re: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor
To: isoss@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sunday, 13 March, 2011, 21:20



 
Really informative.

What is the impact factor of Pakistan Journal of Statistics (PJS)?

Regards,
 
Mehwish Hussain
 

--- On Sat, 12/3/11, ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...> wrote:

> From: ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...>
> Subject: [isoss] Re: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor [1 Attachment]
> To: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
> Date: Saturday, 12 March, 2011, 23:46
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>  
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> [Attachment(s) from ISOSS Headquarters
> included below]
>
>
>    Subject:
> http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factorhttp://alpha2.infim.ro/~ltpd/Jo_rankingb.htm
> Impact
> FactorFrom Wikipedia, the
> free encyclopediaThe impact
> factor, often abbreviated IF, is a measure
> reflecting the average number of citations to
> articles published in science and
> social science journals. It is frequently used as
> a proxy for
> the relative importance of a journal within its field, with
> journals with higher impact factors deemed to be more
> important than those with lower ones. The impact factor was
> devised by Eugene
> Garfield, the founder of the Institute for
> Scientific Information (ISI), now part
> of Thomson
> Reuters. Impact factors are calculated yearly for
> those journals that are indexed in Thomson
> Reuter's Journal Citation
> Reports.Contents [hide]·        
> 1 Calculation·        
> 2 Use·        
> 3 Criticismso   
> 3.1 Validityo   
> 3.2 Editorial policies which alter
> the impact factoro   
> 3.3 Incorrect application of impact
> factoro   
> 3.4 Responses·        
> 4 Other measures of
> impacto   
> 4.1 Related
> indiceso   
> 4.2 PageRank
> algorithmo   
> 4.3 Article level
> metrics·        
> 5 See
> also·        
> 6 References·        
> 7 External
> links[edit]CalculationIn a given year, the
> impact factor of a journal is the average number of
> citations received per paper published in that journal
> during the two preceding years.[1] For
> example, if a journal has an impact factor of 3 in 2008,
> then its papers published in 2006 and 2007 received 3
> citations each on average. The 2008 impact factor of a
> journal would be calculated as follows:A = the number of
> times articles published in 2006 and 2007 were cited by
> indexed journals during 2008B = the total
> number of "citable items" published by that
> journal in 2006 and 2007. ("Citable items" are
> usually articles, reviews, proceedings, or notes; not
> editorials or Letters-to-the-Editor.)2008 impact factor
> = A/B(Note that 2008 impact
> factors are actually published in 2009; they cannot be
> calculated until all of the 2008 publications have been
> processed by the indexing agency.)New journals, which are
> indexed from their first published issue, will receive an
> impact factor after two years of indexing; in this case, the
> citations to the year prior to Volume 1, and the number of
> articles published in the year prior to Volume 1 are known
> zero values. Journals that are indexed starting with a
> volume other than the first volume will not get an impact
> factor until they have been indexed for three years. Annuals
> and other irregular publications sometimes publish no items
> in a particular year, affecting the count. The impact factor
> relates to a specific time period; it is possible to
> calculate it for any desired period, and the Journal
> Citation Reports (JCR) also includes a 5-year
> impact factor.[2] The
> JCR shows rankings of journals by impact factor, if desired
> by discipline, such asorganic
> chemistry or psychiatry.[edit]UseThe IF is used to
> compare different journals within a certain field.
> The ISI Web of
> Knowledge indexes more than 11,000 science
> and social science journals[3] and
> the results are widely available[citation
> needed].[edit]CriticismsNumerous criticisms
> have been made of the use of an impact factor, including the
> more general debate on the usefulness of citation metrics.
> Criticisms mainly concern the validity of the impact factor,
> policies that alter it, and its incorrect application.[4][edit]Validity§  The impact factor is
> highly discipline-dependent. The percentage of total
> citations occurring in the first two years after publication
> varies highly among disciplines from 1-3 percent in the
> mathematical and physical sciences to 5-8 percent in the
> biological sciences.[5]§  The impact factor could
> not be reproduced in an independent audit[6] (but
> see Thomson Scientific's reply[7]).§  The impact factor
> refers to the average number of citations per paper, but
> this is not a normal
> distribution. It is rather a Bradford
> distribution, as predicted by theory. Being
> an arithmetic
> mean, the impact factor therefore is not a valid
> representation of this distribution and unfit for citation
> evaluation.[8]§  In the short term -
> especially in the case of low-impact-factor journals - many
> of the citations to a certain article are made in papers
> written by the author(s) of the original article.[9] This
> means that counting citations may be independent of the real
> “impact” of the work among investigators. Garfield,
> however, maintains that this phenomenon hardly influences a
> journal's impact factor.[10]However,
> a study of author self-citations in diabetes literature
> found that the frequency of author self-citation was not
> associated with the quality of publications.[11] Similarly,
> journal self-citation is common in journals dealing in
> specialized topics having high overlap in readership and
> authors, and is not necessarily a sign of low quality or
> manipulation.[12][edit]Editorial policies
> which alter the impact factorA journal can adopt
> editorial policies that increase its impact factor.[13][14] These
> editorial policies are not necessarily correlated with
> improving the quality of published scientific
> work.§  Journals may publish a
> larger percentage of review articles which generally are
> cited more than research reports.[citation
> needed] Therefore review articles
> can raise the impact factor of the journal and review
> journals will therefore often have the highest impact
> factors in their respective fields.§  Journals may change the
> fraction of "citable items" compared to
> front-matter in the denominator of the IF equation. Which
> types of articles are considered "citable" is
> largely a matter of negotiation between journals and Thomson
> Scientific. As a result of such negotiations, impact factor
> variations of more than 300% have been observed.[15] For
> instance, editorials in a journal are not considered to be
> citable items and therefore do not enter into the
> denominator of the impact factor. However, citations to such
> items will still enter into the numerator, thereby inflating
> the impact factor. In addition, if such items cite other
> articles (often even from the same journal), those
> citations will be counted and will increase
> the citation count for the cited journal. This effect is
> hard to evaluate, for the distinction between editorial
> comment and short original articles is not always obvious.
> "Letters to the editor" might refer to either
> class.§  Several methods, not
> necessarily with nefarious intent, exist for a journal to
> cite articles in the same journal which will increase the
> journal's impact factor.[16][17]§  In 2007, a specialist
> journal with an impact factor of 0.66 published an editorial
> that cited all its articles from 2005 to 2006 in a protest
> against the absurd use of the impact factor.[18] The
> large number of citations meant that the impact factor for
> that journal increased to 1.44. As a result of the increase,
> the journal was not included in the 2008 and 2009 Journal
> Citation Report.[19]§  In 2008 a single
> article "A short history of SHELX", included a
> sentence that essentially instructs readers to cite the
> paper: "This paper could serve as a general literature
> citation when one or more of the open-source SHELX programs
> (and the Bruker AXS version SHELXTL) are employed in the
> course of a crystal-structure determination". This
> article received more than 6,600 citations. As a
> consequence, the impact factor of the journal Acta
> Crystallographica Section A rose from 2.051 in 2008
> to 49.926 in 2009, more
> than Nature (31.434)
> and Science (28.103).[20] The
> second most cited article in Acta Crystallographica
> Section A in 2008 had only 28 citations.[21][edit]Incorrect application
> of impact factor§  The IF may be
> incorrectly applied to evaluate the significance of an
> individual publication or to evaluate an individual
> researcher.[22]This does not work well
> since a small number of publications are cited much more
> than the majority - for example, about 90% of Nature's
> 2004 impact factor was based on only a quarter of its
> publications, and thus the importance of any one publication
> will be different from, and in most cases less than, the
> overall number.[23] The
> impact factor, however, averages over all articles and thus
> underestimates the citations of the most cited articles
> while exaggerating the number of citations of the majority
> of articles. Consequently, the Higher Education
> Funding Council for Englandwas urged by
> the House of
> Commons Science and
> Technology Select Committee to
> remind Research
> Assessment Exercise panels that they are
> obliged to assess the quality of the content of individual
> articles, not the reputation of the journal in which they
> are published.[24][edit]Responses§  Because “the impact
> factor is not always a reliable instrument” in November
> 2007 the European
> Association of Science Editors (EASE) issued
> an official statement recommending “that journal impact
> factors are used only - and cautiously - for measuring and
> comparing the influence of entire journals, but not for the
> assessment of single papers, and certainly not for the
> assessment of researchers or research programmes."[4]§  In July 2008,
> the International
> Council for Science (ICSU) Committee on
> Freedom and Responsibility in the conduct of Science (CFRS)
> issued a "Statement on publication practices and
> indices and the role of peer review in research
> assessment", suggesting some possible solutions, e.g.
> considering penalising scientists for an excessive number of
> publications per year.[25]§  In February 2010,
> the Deutsche
> Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Foundation
> for Science) published new guidelines to evaluate only
> articles and no bibliometric information on candidates to be
> evaluated in all decisions concerning
> "...performance-based funding allocations, postdoctoral
> qualifications, appointments, or reviewing funding
> proposals, [where] increasing importance has been given to
> numerical indicators such as the H-index and the impact
> factor."[26] This
> decision follows similar ones of the National Science
> Foundation (US) or the Research
> Assessment Exercise(UK).[citation
> needed][edit]Other
> measures of impact[edit]Related
> indicesSome related values,
> also calculated and published by the same organization,
> are:§  the immediacy
> index: the number of citations the articles in a
> journal receive in a given year divided by the number of
> articles published.§  the cited
> half-life: the median age of the articles that were
> cited in Journal Citation Reports each
> year. For example, if a journal's half-life in 2005 is
> 5, that means the citations from 2001-2005 are half of all
> the citations from that journal in 2005, and the other half
> of the citations precede 2001.[27]§  the aggregate
> impact factor for a subject category: it is
> calculated taking into account the number of citations to
> all journals in the subject category and the number of
> articles from all the journals in the subject
> category.These measures apply
> only to journals, not individual articles or individual
> scientists (unlike the H-index).
> The relative number of citations an individual article
> receives is better viewed as citation
> impact.It is, however,
> possible to measure the Impact factor of the journals in
> which a particular person has published articles. This use
> is widespread, but controversial. Garfield warns about the
> "misuse in evaluating individuals" because there
> is "a wide variation from article to article within a
> single journal".[10] Impact
> factors have a large, but controversial, influence on the
> way published scientific research is perceived and
> evaluated.[edit]PageRank
> algorithmIn 1976 a recursive
> impact factor that gives citations from journals with high
> impact greater weight than citations from low-impact
> journals was proposed.[28] Such
> a recursive impact factor resembles thePageRank algorithm
> of the Google search
> engine, though the original Pinski and Narin paper uses a
> "trade balance" approach in which journals score
> highest when they are often cited but rarely cite other
> journals. A number of subsequent authors have proposed
> related approaches to ranking scholarly journals.[29][30][31] In
> 2006, Johan Bollen, Marko A. Rodriguez, and Herbert Van de
> Sompel also proposed using the PageRank algorithm.[32] From
> their paper:ISI Impact
> FactorPageRankCombined152.28ANNU REV
> IMMUNOL16.78Nature51.97Nature237.65ANNU REV
> BIOCHEM16.39Journal of
> Biological Chemistry48.78Science336.83PHYSIOL
> REV16.38Science19.84New England
> Journal of Medicine435.04NAT REV MOL CELL
> BIO14.49PNAS15.34Cell534.83New England
> Journal of Medicine8.41PHYS REV
> LETT14.88PNAS630.98Nature5.76Cell10.62Journal of
> Biological Chemistry730.55Nature
> Medicine5.70New England
> Journal of Medicine8.49JAMA829.78Science4.67Journal of the
> American Chemical Society7.78The
> Lancet928.18NAT
> IMMUNOL4.46J
> IMMUNOL7.56NAT
> GENET1028.17REV MOD
> PHYS4.28APPL PHYS
> LETT6.53Nature
> MedicineThe table shows the top
> 10 journals by ISI Impact
> Factor, PageRank, and a modified system that combines the
> two (based on 2003 data). Nature and Science are
> generally regarded as the most prestigious journals, and in
> the combined system they come out on top.The Eigenfactor is
> another PageRank-type
> measure of journal influence,[33] with
> rankings freely available online.[34][edit]Article level
> metricsStarting in March 2009,
> the Public Library
> of Science introduced "article level
> metrics[35] on
> every article in all of their titles.[edit]See
> also§  H-index,
> for the impact factor of individual scientists, rather than
> journals.§  PageRank,
> the algorithm used by Google,
> based on similar principles.§  Eigenfactor,
> another journal citation ranking method.§  SCImago Journal
> Rank, an open access journal metric which is
> based on Scopus data and uses an algorithm similar to
> PageRank.§  Lowry protein
> assay paper by Oliver
> Lowry - one of the most cited papers in the
> scientific literature (cited over 200,000
> times).[edit]References1.    
> ^ "Introducing
> the Impact Factor". Retrieved
> 2009-08-26.2.    
> ^ "JCR with
> Eigenfactor". Retrieved
> 2009-08-26.3.    
> ^ "Web of
> Knowledge > Real Facts > Quality and
> Quantity". Retrieved
> 2010-05-05.4.    
> ^ a b "European
> Association of Science Editors statement on impact
> factors". Retrieved
> 2009-03-25.5.    
> ^ Erjen van Nierop
> (2009). "Why do
> statistics journals have low impact
> factors?". Statistica
> Neerlandica 63 (1): 52–62.doi:10.1111/j.1467-9574.2008.00408.x.6.    
> ^ Mike Rossner, Heather Van Epps,
> and Emma Hill (December 17, 2007). "Show me
> the data". Journal of Cell
> Biology.7.    
> ^ "Thomson
> Scientific Corrects Inaccuracies In Editorial - Citation
> Impact Center - Thomson Reuters
> Forums". Retrieved
> 2009-08-31.8.    
> ^ Joint Committee on Quantitative
> Assessment of Research (June 12, 2008). "Citation
> Statistics" (PDF). International
> Mathematical Union.9.    
> ^ S.A. Marashi. On
> the identity of “citers”: are papers promptly recognized
> by other investigators? (2005) Med. Hypotheses 65,
> 822. PubMed 15990244.10.   ^ a b Eugene Garfield (June
> 1998). "The Impact
> Factor and Using It Correctly". Der
> Unfallchirurg 101 (6): 413–414.PMID 9677838.11.  
> ^ Gami AS, Montori VM, Wilczynski
> NL, Haynes RB (2004)."Author
> self-citation in the diabetes
> literature". CMAJ 170(13):
> 1925–7. doi:10.1503/cmaj.1031879. PMC 421720.PMID 15210641.12.  
> ^ Natasa Kovacic and Aleksandra
> Misak (2004). "Author
> self-citation in medical
> literature". CMAJ 170 (13):
> 1929–30.doi:10.1503/cmaj.1040513.13.  
> ^ Richard Monastersky (October
> 14, 2005). "The Number
> That's Devouring Science". The Chronicle
> of Higher Education.14.  
> ^ Douglas N.
> Arnold; Kristine K. Fowler (2011).
> "Nefarious Numbers". Notices of the
> American Mathematical
> Society 58(3): 434-437. arXiv:1010.0278.15.  
> ^ PLoS Medicine Editors (June 6,
> 2006). "The Impact
> Factor Game". PLoS
> Medicine (PLoS Medicine) 3 (6):
> e291.doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0030291. PMC 1475651.PMID 16749869.16.  
> ^ Agrawal A (2005). "Corruption
> of Journal Impact Factors".Trends in
> Ecology and
> Evolution 20 (4): 157.doi:10.1016/j.tree.2005.02.002. PMID 16701362.17.  
> ^ Fassoulaki A, Papilas K,
> Paraskeva A, Patris K (2002). "Impact factor bias and
> proposed adjustments for its determination". Acta
> Anaesthesiologica
> Scandinavica 46 (7):
> 902–5. doi:10.1034/j.1399-6576.2002.460723.x.PMID 12139549.18.  
> ^ Harm K. Schuttea, Jan G. Svec
> (2007). "Reaction of Folia Phoniatrica et
> Logopaedica on the Current Trend of Impact Factor
> Measures". Folia
> Phoniatrica et
> Logopaedica 59 (6):
> 281–285. doi:10.1159/000108334. PMID 17965570.19.  
> ^ "Journal
> Citation Reports - Notices". Retrieved
> 2009-09-24.20.  
> ^ New impact
> factors yield surprises - The Scientist - Magazine of the
> Life Sciences21.  
> ^ What does it
> mean to be #2 in Impact? - Thomson Reuters
> Community22.  
> ^ Seglen PO (1997). "Why the
> impact factor of journals should not be used for evaluating
> research". BMJ 314 (7079):
> 498–502. PMC 2126010. PMID 9056804. Free
> PDF download for the public.23.  
> ^ "Not-so-deep
> impact" (This editorial is available
> free of
> charge.). Nature 435 (7045):
> 1003–4. June 23, 2005.doi:10.1038/4351003b. PMID 15973362.24.  
> ^ "House of
> Commons - Science and Technology - Tenth
> Report". 2004-07-07. Retrieved
> 2008-07-28.25.  
> ^ International
> Council for Science statement26.  
> ^ DFG press release
> (http://www.dfg.de/en/service/press/press_releases/2010/pressemitteilung_nr_07/index.html)27.  
> ^ Impact Factor,
> Immediacy Index, Cited Half-life28.  
> ^ Gabriel Pinski and Francis
> Narin (1976). "Citation influence for journal
> aggregates of scientific publications: Theory with
> application to literature of
> physics". Information Processing &
> Management 12: 297–312. doi:10.1016/0306-4573(76)90048-0.29.  
> ^ S. J. Liebowitz and J. P.
> Palmer. (1984). "Assessing
> the relative impacts of economics
> journals". Journal of Economic
> Literature (American Economic
> Association) 22 (1):
> 77–88.30.  
> ^ I. Palacios-Huerta and O. Volij
> (2004). "The measurement of intellectual
> influence". Econometrica 72:
> 963–977.doi:10.1111/j.1468-0262.2004.00519.x.31.  
> ^ Y. K. Kodrzycki and P. D. Yu
> (2006). "New approaches to ranking economics
> journals". B. E. Journal of Economics Analysis
> and Policy 5. doi:10.2202/1538-0645.1520.32.  
> ^ Johan Bollen, Marko A.
> Rodriguez, and Herbert Van de Sompel. (December
> 2006). "Journal
> Status". Scientometrics69 (3).33.  
> ^ C. T.
> Bergstrom. (May 2007). "Eigenfactor:
> Measuring the value and prestige of scholarly
> journals". College & Research
> Libraries
> News 68 (5).34.  
> ^ eigenfactor.org35.  
> ^ Article-Level
> Metrics Information[edit]External
> links§  List of ranking
> and impact factor by Sci-Bytes§  "Journal
> Citation Reports". Retrieved
> 2009-07-18.§  Does the
> 'Impact Factor' Impact Decisions on Where to
> Publish?, American
> Physical Society. Accessed:
> 2010-07=10.§  2008 statement
> on inappropriate use of impact factors, published
> by the European
> Association of Science Editors§  UK science will
> be judged by peer review. Nature 468, 357.
> November 17, 2010 Gilbert, Natasha (2010).
> "UK science will be judged on
> impact". Nature 468:
> 357. doi:10.1038/468357a.PMID 21085146.Categories: Bibliometrics | Academic
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#1536 From: isoss-owner@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sun Mar 13, 2011 6:41 pm
Subject: ISOSS (Web Live Support)(Re-Launched)
isoss-owner@yahoogroups.com
Send Email Send Email
 

Dear Members

Announcement:

"ISOSS Web Live Support has been re-launched after successful up gradation in its console now you can use Live Support for your queries / questions  etc.

Thanks for your patience and feedbacks

Regards

----

I.T Manager

ISOSS Lahore

Pakistan

 


#1537 From: Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...>
Date: Mon Mar 14, 2011 5:10 am
Subject: Re: Re: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor
mehvish.hussain
Send Email Send Email
 
 
Impressing...
 
Have a growing sparkling success to PJS. Aameen

--- On Sun, 13/3/11, Muhammad Iftikhar <isosspk@...> wrote:

From: Muhammad Iftikhar <isosspk@...>
Subject: Re: [isoss] Re: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor
To: isoss@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sunday, 13 March, 2011, 10:54

 
Pakistan Journal of Statistics (PJS) has been selected for coverage in the Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE) and Web of Science (WoS) beginning with volume 24(1) 2008. Since three years’ worth of source item and citation data are required to compute an impact factor, and coverage of PJS began with the 2008 volume, the first impact factor will appear in the 2010 edition of the Journal Citation Reports (JCR) which will be published this time in June, 2011.

 

It can be checked through the following link: 

http://scientific.thomsonreuters.com/cgi-bin/jrnlst/jlresults.cgi?PC=MASTER&Full=pakistan%20journal%20of%20statistics

 

 


--- On Sun, 13/3/11, Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...> wrote:

From: Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...>
Subject: Re: [isoss] Re: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor
To: isoss@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sunday, 13 March, 2011, 21:20



 
Really informative.

What is the impact factor of Pakistan Journal of Statistics (PJS)?

Regards,
 
Mehwish Hussain
 

--- On Sat, 12/3/11, ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...> wrote:

> From: ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...>
> Subject: [isoss] Re: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor [1 Attachment]
> To: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
> Date: Saturday, 12 March, 2011, 23:46
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>  
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> [Attachment(s) from ISOSS Headquarters
> included below]
>
>
>    Subject:
> http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factorhttp://alpha2.infim.ro/~ltpd/Jo_rankingb.htm
> Impact
> FactorFrom Wikipedia, the
> free encyclopediaThe impact
> factor, often abbreviated IF, is a measure
> reflecting the average number of citations to
> articles published in science and
> social science journals. It is frequently used as
> a proxy for
> the relative importance of a journal within its field, with
> journals with higher impact factors deemed to be more
> important than those with lower ones. The impact factor was
> devised by Eugene
> Garfield, the founder of the Institute for
> Scientific Information (ISI), now part
> of Thomson
> Reuters. Impact factors are calculated yearly for
> those journals that are indexed in Thomson
> Reuter's Journal Citation
> Reports.Contents [hide]·        
> 1 Calculation·        
> 2 Use·        
> 3 Criticismso   
> 3.1 Validityo   
> 3.2 Editorial policies which alter
> the impact factoro   
> 3.3 Incorrect application of impact
> factoro   
> 3.4 Responses·        
> 4 Other measures of
> impacto   
> 4.1 Related
> indiceso   
> 4.2 PageRank
> algorithmo   
> 4.3 Article level
> metrics·        
> 5 See
> also·        
> 6 References·        
> 7 External
> links[edit]CalculationIn a given year, the
> impact factor of a journal is the average number of
> citations received per paper published in that journal
> during the two preceding years.[1] For
> example, if a journal has an impact factor of 3 in 2008,
> then its papers published in 2006 and 2007 received 3
> citations each on average. The 2008 impact factor of a
> journal would be calculated as follows:A = the number of
> times articles published in 2006 and 2007 were cited by
> indexed journals during 2008B = the total
> number of "citable items" published by that
> journal in 2006 and 2007. ("Citable items" are
> usually articles, reviews, proceedings, or notes; not
> editorials or Letters-to-the-Editor.)2008 impact factor
> = A/B(Note that 2008 impact
> factors are actually published in 2009; they cannot be
> calculated until all of the 2008 publications have been
> processed by the indexing agency.)New journals, which are
> indexed from their first published issue, will receive an
> impact factor after two years of indexing; in this case, the
> citations to the year prior to Volume 1, and the number of
> articles published in the year prior to Volume 1 are known
> zero values. Journals that are indexed starting with a
> volume other than the first volume will not get an impact
> factor until they have been indexed for three years. Annuals
> and other irregular publications sometimes publish no items
> in a particular year, affecting the count. The impact factor
> relates to a specific time period; it is possible to
> calculate it for any desired period, and the Journal
> Citation Reports (JCR) also includes a 5-year
> impact factor.[2] The
> JCR shows rankings of journals by impact factor, if desired
> by discipline, such asorganic
> chemistry or psychiatry.[edit]UseThe IF is used to
> compare different journals within a certain field.
> The ISI Web of
> Knowledge indexes more than 11,000 science
> and social science journals[3] and
> the results are widely available[citation
> needed].[edit]CriticismsNumerous criticisms
> have been made of the use of an impact factor, including the
> more general debate on the usefulness of citation metrics.
> Criticisms mainly concern the validity of the impact factor,
> policies that alter it, and its incorrect application.[4][edit]Validity§  The impact factor is
> highly discipline-dependent. The percentage of total
> citations occurring in the first two years after publication
> varies highly among disciplines from 1-3 percent in the
> mathematical and physical sciences to 5-8 percent in the
> biological sciences.[5]§  The impact factor could
> not be reproduced in an independent audit[6] (but
> see Thomson Scientific's reply[7]).§  The impact factor
> refers to the average number of citations per paper, but
> this is not a normal
> distribution. It is rather a Bradford
> distribution, as predicted by theory. Being
> an arithmetic
> mean, the impact factor therefore is not a valid
> representation of this distribution and unfit for citation
> evaluation.[8]§  In the short term -
> especially in the case of low-impact-factor journals - many
> of the citations to a certain article are made in papers
> written by the author(s) of the original article.[9] This
> means that counting citations may be independent of the real
> “impact” of the work among investigators. Garfield,
> however, maintains that this phenomenon hardly influences a
> journal's impact factor.[10]However,
> a study of author self-citations in diabetes literature
> found that the frequency of author self-citation was not
> associated with the quality of publications.[11] Similarly,
> journal self-citation is common in journals dealing in
> specialized topics having high overlap in readership and
> authors, and is not necessarily a sign of low quality or
> manipulation.[12][edit]Editorial policies
> which alter the impact factorA journal can adopt
> editorial policies that increase its impact factor.[13][14] These
> editorial policies are not necessarily correlated with
> improving the quality of published scientific
> work.§  Journals may publish a
> larger percentage of review articles which generally are
> cited more than research reports.[citation
> needed] Therefore review articles
> can raise the impact factor of the journal and review
> journals will therefore often have the highest impact
> factors in their respective fields.§  Journals may change the
> fraction of "citable items" compared to
> front-matter in the denominator of the IF equation. Which
> types of articles are considered "citable" is
> largely a matter of negotiation between journals and Thomson
> Scientific. As a result of such negotiations, impact factor
> variations of more than 300% have been observed.[15] For
> instance, editorials in a journal are not considered to be
> citable items and therefore do not enter into the
> denominator of the impact factor. However, citations to such
> items will still enter into the numerator, thereby inflating
> the impact factor. In addition, if such items cite other
> articles (often even from the same journal), those
> citations will be counted and will increase
> the citation count for the cited journal. This effect is
> hard to evaluate, for the distinction between editorial
> comment and short original articles is not always obvious.
> "Letters to the editor" might refer to either
> class.§  Several methods, not
> necessarily with nefarious intent, exist for a journal to
> cite articles in the same journal which will increase the
> journal's impact factor.[16][17]§  In 2007, a specialist
> journal with an impact factor of 0.66 published an editorial
> that cited all its articles from 2005 to 2006 in a protest
> against the absurd use of the impact factor.[18] The
> large number of citations meant that the impact factor for
> that journal increased to 1.44. As a result of the increase,
> the journal was not included in the 2008 and 2009 Journal
> Citation Report.[19]§  In 2008 a single
> article "A short history of SHELX", included a
> sentence that essentially instructs readers to cite the
> paper: "This paper could serve as a general literature
> citation when one or more of the open-source SHELX programs
> (and the Bruker AXS version SHELXTL) are employed in the
> course of a crystal-structure determination". This
> article received more than 6,600 citations. As a
> consequence, the impact factor of the journal Acta
> Crystallographica Section A rose from 2.051 in 2008
> to 49.926 in 2009, more
> than Nature (31.434)
> and Science (28.103).[20] The
> second most cited article in Acta Crystallographica
> Section A in 2008 had only 28 citations.[21][edit]Incorrect application
> of impact factor§  The IF may be
> incorrectly applied to evaluate the significance of an
> individual publication or to evaluate an individual
> researcher.[22]This does not work well
> since a small number of publications are cited much more
> than the majority - for example, about 90% of Nature's
> 2004 impact factor was based on only a quarter of its
> publications, and thus the importance of any one publication
> will be different from, and in most cases less than, the
> overall number.[23] The
> impact factor, however, averages over all articles and thus
> underestimates the citations of the most cited articles
> while exaggerating the number of citations of the majority
> of articles. Consequently, the Higher Education
> Funding Council for Englandwas urged by
> the House of
> Commons Science and
> Technology Select Committee to
> remind Research
> Assessment Exercise panels that they are
> obliged to assess the quality of the content of individual
> articles, not the reputation of the journal in which they
> are published.[24][edit]Responses§  Because “the impact
> factor is not always a reliable instrument” in November
> 2007 the European
> Association of Science Editors (EASE) issued
> an official statement recommending “that journal impact
> factors are used only - and cautiously - for measuring and
> comparing the influence of entire journals, but not for the
> assessment of single papers, and certainly not for the
> assessment of researchers or research programmes."[4]§  In July 2008,
> the International
> Council for Science (ICSU) Committee on
> Freedom and Responsibility in the conduct of Science (CFRS)
> issued a "Statement on publication practices and
> indices and the role of peer review in research
> assessment", suggesting some possible solutions, e.g.
> considering penalising scientists for an excessive number of
> publications per year.[25]§  In February 2010,
> the Deutsche
> Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Foundation
> for Science) published new guidelines to evaluate only
> articles and no bibliometric information on candidates to be
> evaluated in all decisions concerning
> "...performance-based funding allocations, postdoctoral
> qualifications, appointments, or reviewing funding
> proposals, [where] increasing importance has been given to
> numerical indicators such as the H-index and the impact
> factor."[26] This
> decision follows similar ones of the National Science
> Foundation (US) or the Research
> Assessment Exercise(UK).[citation
> needed][edit]Other
> measures of impact[edit]Related
> indicesSome related values,
> also calculated and published by the same organization,
> are:§  the immediacy
> index: the number of citations the articles in a
> journal receive in a given year divided by the number of
> articles published.§  the cited
> half-life: the median age of the articles that were
> cited in Journal Citation Reports each
> year. For example, if a journal's half-life in 2005 is
> 5, that means the citations from 2001-2005 are half of all
> the citations from that journal in 2005, and the other half
> of the citations precede 2001.[27]§  the aggregate
> impact factor for a subject category: it is
> calculated taking into account the number of citations to
> all journals in the subject category and the number of
> articles from all the journals in the subject
> category.These measures apply
> only to journals, not individual articles or individual
> scientists (unlike the H-index).
> The relative number of citations an individual article
> receives is better viewed as citation
> impact.It is, however,
> possible to measure the Impact factor of the journals in
> which a particular person has published articles. This use
> is widespread, but controversial. Garfield warns about the
> "misuse in evaluating individuals" because there
> is "a wide variation from article to article within a
> single journal".[10] Impact
> factors have a large, but controversial, influence on the
> way published scientific research is perceived and
> evaluated.[edit]PageRank
> algorithmIn 1976 a recursive
> impact factor that gives citations from journals with high
> impact greater weight than citations from low-impact
> journals was proposed.[28] Such
> a recursive impact factor resembles thePageRank algorithm
> of the Google search
> engine, though the original Pinski and Narin paper uses a
> "trade balance" approach in which journals score
> highest when they are often cited but rarely cite other
> journals. A number of subsequent authors have proposed
> related approaches to ranking scholarly journals.[29][30][31] In
> 2006, Johan Bollen, Marko A. Rodriguez, and Herbert Van de
> Sompel also proposed using the PageRank algorithm.[32] From
> their paper:ISI Impact
> FactorPageRankCombined152.28ANNU REV
> IMMUNOL16.78Nature51.97Nature237.65ANNU REV
> BIOCHEM16.39Journal of
> Biological Chemistry48.78Science336.83PHYSIOL
> REV16.38Science19.84New England
> Journal of Medicine435.04NAT REV MOL CELL
> BIO14.49PNAS15.34Cell534.83New England
> Journal of Medicine8.41PHYS REV
> LETT14.88PNAS630.98Nature5.76Cell10.62Journal of
> Biological Chemistry730.55Nature
> Medicine5.70New England
> Journal of Medicine8.49JAMA829.78Science4.67Journal of the
> American Chemical Society7.78The
> Lancet928.18NAT
> IMMUNOL4.46J
> IMMUNOL7.56NAT
> GENET1028.17REV MOD
> PHYS4.28APPL PHYS
> LETT6.53Nature
> MedicineThe table shows the top
> 10 journals by ISI Impact
> Factor, PageRank, and a modified system that combines the
> two (based on 2003 data). Nature and Science are
> generally regarded as the most prestigious journals, and in
> the combined system they come out on top.The Eigenfactor is
> another PageRank-type
> measure of journal influence,[33] with
> rankings freely available online.[34][edit]Article level
> metricsStarting in March 2009,
> the Public Library
> of Science introduced "article level
> metrics[35] on
> every article in all of their titles.[edit]See
> also§  H-index,
> for the impact factor of individual scientists, rather than
> journals.§  PageRank,
> the algorithm used by Google,
> based on similar principles.§  Eigenfactor,
> another journal citation ranking method.§  SCImago Journal
> Rank, an open access journal metric which is
> based on Scopus data and uses an algorithm similar to
> PageRank.§  Lowry protein
> assay paper by Oliver
> Lowry - one of the most cited papers in the
> scientific literature (cited over 200,000
> times).[edit]References1.    
> ^ "Introducing
> the Impact Factor". Retrieved
> 2009-08-26.2.    
> ^ "JCR with
> Eigenfactor". Retrieved
> 2009-08-26.3.    
> ^ "Web of
> Knowledge > Real Facts > Quality and
> Quantity". Retrieved
> 2010-05-05.4.    
> ^ a b "European
> Association of Science Editors statement on impact
> factors". Retrieved
> 2009-03-25.5.    
> ^ Erjen van Nierop
> (2009). "Why do
> statistics journals have low impact
> factors?". Statistica
> Neerlandica 63 (1): 52–62.doi:10.1111/j.1467-9574.2008.00408.x.6.    
> ^ Mike Rossner, Heather Van Epps,
> and Emma Hill (December 17, 2007). "Show me
> the data". Journal of Cell
> Biology.7.    
> ^ "Thomson
> Scientific Corrects Inaccuracies In Editorial - Citation
> Impact Center - Thomson Reuters
> Forums". Retrieved
> 2009-08-31.8.    
> ^ Joint Committee on Quantitative
> Assessment of Research (June 12, 2008). "Citation
> Statistics" (PDF). International
> Mathematical Union.9.    
> ^ S.A. Marashi. On
> the identity of “citers”: are papers promptly recognized
> by other investigators? (2005) Med. Hypotheses 65,
> 822. PubMed 15990244.10.   ^ a b Eugene Garfield (June
> 1998). "The Impact
> Factor and Using It Correctly". Der
> Unfallchirurg 101 (6): 413–414.PMID 9677838.11.  
> ^ Gami AS, Montori VM, Wilczynski
> NL, Haynes RB (2004)."Author
> self-citation in the diabetes
> literature". CMAJ 170(13):
> 1925–7. doi:10.1503/cmaj.1031879. PMC 421720.PMID 15210641.12.  
> ^ Natasa Kovacic and Aleksandra
> Misak (2004). "Author
> self-citation in medical
> literature". CMAJ 170 (13):
> 1929–30.doi:10.1503/cmaj.1040513.13.  
> ^ Richard Monastersky (October
> 14, 2005). "The Number
> That's Devouring Science". The Chronicle
> of Higher Education.14.  
> ^ Douglas N.
> Arnold; Kristine K. Fowler (2011).
> "Nefarious Numbers". Notices of the
> American Mathematical
> Society 58(3): 434-437. arXiv:1010.0278.15.  
> ^ PLoS Medicine Editors (June 6,
> 2006). "The Impact
> Factor Game". PLoS
> Medicine (PLoS Medicine) 3 (6):
> e291.doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0030291. PMC 1475651.PMID 16749869.16.  
> ^ Agrawal A (2005). "Corruption
> of Journal Impact Factors".Trends in
> Ecology and
> Evolution 20 (4): 157.doi:10.1016/j.tree.2005.02.002. PMID 16701362.17.  
> ^ Fassoulaki A, Papilas K,
> Paraskeva A, Patris K (2002). "Impact factor bias and
> proposed adjustments for its determination". Acta
> Anaesthesiologica
> Scandinavica 46 (7):
> 902–5. doi:10.1034/j.1399-6576.2002.460723.x.PMID 12139549.18.  
> ^ Harm K. Schuttea, Jan G. Svec
> (2007). "Reaction of Folia Phoniatrica et
> Logopaedica on the Current Trend of Impact Factor
> Measures". Folia
> Phoniatrica et
> Logopaedica 59 (6):
> 281–285. doi:10.1159/000108334. PMID 17965570.19.  
> ^ "Journal
> Citation Reports - Notices". Retrieved
> 2009-09-24.20.  
> ^ New impact
> factors yield surprises - The Scientist - Magazine of the
> Life Sciences21.  
> ^ What does it
> mean to be #2 in Impact? - Thomson Reuters
> Community22.  
> ^ Seglen PO (1997). "Why the
> impact factor of journals should not be used for evaluating
> research". BMJ 314 (7079):
> 498–502. PMC 2126010. PMID 9056804. Free
> PDF download for the public.23.  
> ^ "Not-so-deep
> impact" (This editorial is available
> free of
> charge.). Nature 435 (7045):
> 1003–4. June 23, 2005.doi:10.1038/4351003b. PMID 15973362.24.  
> ^ "House of
> Commons - Science and Technology - Tenth
> Report". 2004-07-07. Retrieved
> 2008-07-28.25.  
> ^ International
> Council for Science statement26.  
> ^ DFG press release
> (http://www.dfg.de/en/service/press/press_releases/2010/pressemitteilung_nr_07/index.html)27.  
> ^ Impact Factor,
> Immediacy Index, Cited Half-life28.  
> ^ Gabriel Pinski and Francis
> Narin (1976). "Citation influence for journal
> aggregates of scientific publications: Theory with
> application to literature of
> physics". Information Processing &
> Management 12: 297–312. doi:10.1016/0306-4573(76)90048-0.29.  
> ^ S. J. Liebowitz and J. P.
> Palmer. (1984). "Assessing
> the relative impacts of economics
> journals". Journal of Economic
> Literature (American Economic
> Association) 22 (1):
> 77–88.30.  
> ^ I. Palacios-Huerta and O. Volij
> (2004). "The measurement of intellectual
> influence". Econometrica 72:
> 963–977.doi:10.1111/j.1468-0262.2004.00519.x.31.  
> ^ Y. K. Kodrzycki and P. D. Yu
> (2006). "New approaches to ranking economics
> journals". B. E. Journal of Economics Analysis
> and Policy 5. doi:10.2202/1538-0645.1520.32.  
> ^ Johan Bollen, Marko A.
> Rodriguez, and Herbert Van de Sompel. (December
> 2006). "Journal
> Status". Scientometrics69 (3).33.  
> ^ C. T.
> Bergstrom. (May 2007). "Eigenfactor:
> Measuring the value and prestige of scholarly
> journals". College & Research
> Libraries
> News 68 (5).34.  
> ^ eigenfactor.org35.  
> ^ Article-Level
> Metrics Information[edit]External
> links§  List of ranking
> and impact factor by Sci-Bytes§  "Journal
> Citation Reports". Retrieved
> 2009-07-18.§  Does the
> 'Impact Factor' Impact Decisions on Where to
> Publish?, American
> Physical Society. Accessed:
> 2010-07=10.§  2008 statement
> on inappropriate use of impact factors, published
> by the European
> Association of Science Editors§  UK science will
> be judged by peer review. Nature 468, 357.
> November 17, 2010 Gilbert, Natasha (2010).
> "UK science will be judged on
> impact". Nature 468:
> 357. doi:10.1038/468357a.PMID 21085146.Categories: Bibliometrics | Academic
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#1538 From: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
Date: Mon Mar 14, 2011 2:38 pm
Subject: RE: Re: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor
secretary@...
Send Email Send Email
 

Thanks.

 

From: isoss@yahoogroups.com [mailto:isoss@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Mehvish Hussain
Sent: Monday, March 14, 2011 10:11 AM
To: isoss@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [isoss] Re: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor

 

 

 

Impressing...

 

Have a growing sparkling success to PJS. Aameen

--- On Sun, 13/3/11, Muhammad Iftikhar <isosspk@...> wrote:


From: Muhammad Iftikhar <isosspk@...>
Subject: Re: [isoss] Re: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor
To: isoss@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sunday, 13 March, 2011, 10:54

 

Pakistan Journal of Statistics (PJS) has been selected for coverage in the Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE) and Web of Science (WoS) beginning with volume 24(1) 2008. Since three years’ worth of source item and citation data are required to compute an impact factor, and coverage of PJS began with the 2008 volume, the first impact factor will appear in the 2010 edition of the Journal Citation Reports (JCR) which will be published this time in June, 2011.

 

It can be checked through the following link: 

http://scientific.thomsonreuters.com/cgi-bin/jrnlst/jlresults.cgi?PC=MASTER&Full=pakistan%20journal%20of%20statistics

 

 


--- On Sun, 13/3/11, Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...> wrote:


From: Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...>
Subject: Re: [isoss] Re: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor
To: isoss@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sunday, 13 March, 2011, 21:20

 

 

Really informative.


What is the impact factor of Pakistan Journal of Statistics (PJS)?


Regards,

 

Mehwish Hussain

 


--- On Sat, 12/3/11, ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...> wrote:

> From: ISOSS Headquarters <secretary@...>
> Subject: [isoss] Re: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factor [1 Attachment]
> To: "ISOSS Headquarters" <secretary@...>
> Date: Saturday, 12 March, 2011, 23:46
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>  
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> [Attachment(s) from ISOSS Headquarters
> included below]
>
>
>    Subject:
> http://www.scribd.com/doc/3039067/ISI-Journal-Ranking-Impact-Factorhttp://alpha2.infim.ro/~ltpd/Jo_rankingb.htm
> Impact
> FactorFrom Wikipedia, the
> free encyclopediaThe impact
> factor, often abbreviated IF, is a measure
> reflecting the average number of citations to
> articles published in science and
> social science journals. It is frequently used as
> a proxy for
> the relative importance of a journal within its field, with
> journals with higher impact factors deemed to be more
> important than those with lower ones. The impact factor was
> devised by Eugene
> Garfield, the founder of the Institute for
> Scientific Information (ISI), now part
> of Thomson
> Reuters. Impact factors are calculated yearly for
> those journals that are indexed in Thomson
> Reuter's Journal Citation
> Reports.Contents [hide]·        
> 1 Calculation·        
> 2 Use·        
> 3 Criticismso   
> 3.1 Validityo   
> 3.2 Editorial policies which alter
> the impact factoro   
> 3.3 Incorrect application of impact
> factoro   
> 3.4 Responses·        
> 4 Other measures of
> impacto   
> 4.1 Related
> indiceso   
> 4.2 PageRank
> algorithmo   
> 4.3 Article level
> metrics·        
> 5 See
> also·        
> 6 References·        
> 7 External
> links[edit]CalculationIn a given year, the
> impact factor of a journal is the average number of
> citations received per paper published in that journal
> during the two preceding years.[1] For
> example, if a journal has an impact factor of 3 in 2008,
> then its papers published in 2006 and 2007 received 3
> citations each on average. The 2008 impact factor of a
> journal would be calculated as follows:A = the number of
> times articles published in 2006 and 2007 were cited by
> indexed journals during 2008B = the total
> number of "citable items" published by that
> journal in 2006 and 2007. ("Citable items" are
> usually articles, reviews, proceedings, or notes; not
> editorials or Letters-to-the-Editor.)2008 impact factor
> = A/B(Note that 2008 impact
> factors are actually published in 2009; they cannot be
> calculated until all of the 2008 publications have been
> processed by the indexing agency.)New journals, which are
> indexed from their first published issue, will receive an
> impact factor after two years of indexing; in this case, the
> citations to the year prior to Volume 1, and the number of
> articles published in the year prior to Volume 1 are known
> zero values. Journals that are indexed starting with a
> volume other than the first volume will not get an impact
> factor until they have been indexed for three years. Annuals
> and other irregular publications sometimes publish no items
> in a particular year, affecting the count. The impact factor
> relates to a specific time period; it is possible to
> calculate it for any desired period, and the Journal
> Citation Reports (JCR) also includes a 5-year
> impact factor.[2] The
> JCR shows rankings of journals by impact factor, if desired
> by discipline, such asorganic
> chemistry or psychiatry.[edit]UseThe IF is used to
> compare different journals within a certain field.
> The ISI Web of
> Knowledge indexes more than 11,000 science
> and social science journals[3] and
> the results are widely available[citation
> needed].[edit]CriticismsNumerous criticisms
> have been made of the use of an impact factor, including the
> more general debate on the usefulness of citation metrics.
> Criticisms mainly concern the validity of the impact factor,
> policies that alter it, and its incorrect application.[4][edit]Validity§  The impact factor is
> highly discipline-dependent. The percentage of total
> citations occurring in the first two years after publication
> varies highly among disciplines from 1-3 percent in the
> mathematical and physical sciences to 5-8 percent in the
> biological sciences.[5]§  The impact factor could
> not be reproduced in an independent audit[6] (but
> see Thomson Scientific's reply[7]).§  The impact factor
> refers to the average number of citations per paper, but
> this is not a normal
> distribution. It is rather a Bradford
> distribution, as predicted by theory. Being
> an arithmetic
> mean, the impact factor therefore is not a valid
> representation of this distribution and unfit for citation
> evaluation.[8]§  In the short term -
> especially in the case of low-impact-factor journals - many
> of the citations to a certain article are made in papers
> written by the author(s) of the original article.[9] This
> means that counting citations may be independent of the real
> “impact” of the work among investigators. Garfield,
> however, maintains that this phenomenon hardly influences a
> journal's impact factor.[10]However,
> a study of author self-citations in diabetes literature
> found that the frequency of author self-citation was not
> associated with the quality of publications.[11] Similarly,
> journal self-citation is common in journals dealing in
> specialized topics having high overlap in readership and
> authors, and is not necessarily a sign of low quality or
> manipulation.[12][edit]Editorial policies
> which alter the impact factorA journal can adopt
> editorial policies that increase its impact factor.[13][14] These
> editorial policies are not necessarily correlated with
> improving the quality of published scientific
> work.§  Journals may publish a
> larger percentage of review articles which generally are
> cited more than research reports.[citation
> needed] Therefore review articles
> can raise the impact factor of the journal and review
> journals will therefore often have the highest impact
> factors in their respective fields.§  Journals may change the
> fraction of "citable items" compared to
> front-matter in the denominator of the IF equation. Which
> types of articles are considered "citable" is
> largely a matter of negotiation between journals and Thomson
> Scientific. As a result of such negotiations, impact factor
> variations of more than 300% have been observed.[15] For
> instance, editorials in a journal are not considered to be
> citable items and therefore do not enter into the
> denominator of the impact factor. However, citations to such
> items will still enter into the numerator, thereby inflating
> the impact factor. In addition, if such items cite other
> articles (often even from the same journal), those
> citations will be counted and will increase
> the citation count for the cited journal. This effect is
> hard to evaluate, for the distinction between editorial
> comment and short original articles is not always obvious.
> "Letters to the editor" might refer to either
> class.§  Several methods, not
> necessarily with nefarious intent, exist for a journal to
> cite articles in the same journal which will increase the
> journal's impact factor.[16][17]§  In 2007, a specialist
> journal with an impact factor of 0.66 published an editorial
> that cited all its articles from 2005 to 2006 in a protest
> against the absurd use of the impact factor.[18] The
> large number of citations meant that the impact factor for
> that journal increased to 1.44. As a result of the increase,
> the journal was not included in the 2008 and 2009 Journal
> Citation Report.[19]§  In 2008 a single
> article "A short history of SHELX", included a
> sentence that essentially instructs readers to cite the
> paper: "This paper could serve as a general literature
> citation when one or more of the open-source SHELX programs
> (and the Bruker AXS version SHELXTL) are employed in the
> course of a crystal-structure determination". This
> article received more than 6,600 citations. As a
> consequence, the impact factor of the journal Acta
> Crystallographica Section A rose from 2.051 in 2008
> to 49.926 in 2009, more
> than Nature (31.434)
> and Science (28.103).[20] The
> second most cited article in Acta Crystallographica
> Section A in 2008 had only 28 citations.[21][edit]Incorrect application
> of impact factor§  The IF may be
> incorrectly applied to evaluate the significance of an
> individual publication or to evaluate an individual
> researcher.[22]This does not work well
> since a small number of publications are cited much more
> than the majority - for example, about 90% of Nature's
> 2004 impact factor was based on only a quarter of its
> publications, and thus the importance of any one publication
> will be different from, and in most cases less than, the
> overall number.[23] The
> impact factor, however, averages over all articles and thus
> underestimates the citations of the most cited articles
> while exaggerating the number of citations of the majority
> of articles. Consequently, the Higher Education
> Funding Council for Englandwas urged by
> the House of
> Commons Science and
> Technology Select Committee to
> remind Research
> Assessment Exercise panels that they are
> obliged to assess the quality of the content of individual
> articles, not the reputation of the journal in which they
> are published.[24][edit]Responses§  Because “the impact
> factor is not always a reliable instrument” in November
> 2007 the European
> Association of Science Editors (EASE) issued
> an official statement recommending “that journal impact
> factors are used only - and cautiously - for measuring and
> comparing the influence of entire journals, but not for the
> assessment of single papers, and certainly not for the
> assessment of researchers or research programmes."[4]§  In July 2008,
> the International
> Council for Science (ICSU) Committee on
> Freedom and Responsibility in the conduct of Science (CFRS)
> issued a "Statement on publication practices and
> indices and the role of peer review in research
> assessment", suggesting some possible solutions, e.g.
> considering penalising scientists for an excessive number of
> publications per year.[25]§  In February 2010,
> the Deutsche
> Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Foundation
> for Science) published new guidelines to evaluate only
> articles and no bibliometric information on candidates to be
> evaluated in all decisions concerning
> "...performance-based funding allocations, postdoctoral
> qualifications, appointments, or reviewing funding
> proposals, [where] increasing importance has been given to
> numerical indicators such as the H-index and the impact
> factor."[26] This
> decision follows similar ones of the National Science
> Foundation (US) or the Research
> Assessment Exercise(UK).[citation
> needed][edit]Other
> measures of impact[edit]Related
> indicesSome related values,
> also calculated and published by the same organization,
> are:§  the immediacy
> index: the number of citations the articles in a
> journal receive in a given year divided by the number of
> articles published.§  the cited
> half-life: the median age of the articles that were
> cited in Journal Citation Reports each
> year. For example, if a journal's half-life in 2005 is
> 5, that means the citations from 2001-2005 are half of all
> the citations from that journal in 2005, and the other half
> of the citations precede 2001.[27]§  the aggregate
> impact factor for a subject category: it is
> calculated taking into account the number of citations to
> all journals in the subject category and the number of
> articles from all the journals in the subject
> category.These measures apply
> only to journals, not individual articles or individual
> scientists (unlike the H-index).
> The relative number of citations an individual article
> receives is better viewed as citation
> impact.It is, however,
> possible to measure the Impact factor of the journals in
> which a particular person has published articles. This use
> is widespread, but controversial. Garfield warns about the
> "misuse in evaluating individuals" because there
> is "a wide variation from article to article within a
> single journal".[10] Impact
> factors have a large, but controversial, influence on the
> way published scientific research is perceived and
> evaluated.[edit]PageRank
> algorithmIn 1976 a recursive
> impact factor that gives citations from journals with high
> impact greater weight than citations from low-impact
> journals was proposed.[28] Such
> a recursive impact factor resembles thePageRank algorithm
> of the Google search
> engine, though the original Pinski and Narin paper uses a
> "trade balance" approach in which journals score
> highest when they are often cited but rarely cite other
> journals. A number of subsequent authors have proposed
> related approaches to ranking scholarly journals.[29][30][31] In
> 2006, Johan Bollen, Marko A. Rodriguez, and Herbert Van de
> Sompel also proposed using the PageRank algorithm.[32] From
> their paper:ISI Impact
> FactorPageRankCombined152.28ANNU REV
> IMMUNOL16.78Nature51.97Nature237.65ANNU REV
> BIOCHEM16.39Journal of
> Biological Chemistry48.78Science336.83PHYSIOL
> REV16.38Science19.84New England
> Journal of Medicine435.04NAT REV MOL CELL
> BIO14.49PNAS15.34Cell534.83New England
> Journal of Medicine8.41PHYS REV
> LETT14.88PNAS630.98Nature5.76Cell10.62Journal of
> Biological Chemistry730.55Nature
> Medicine5.70New England
> Journal of Medicine8.49JAMA829.78Science4.67Journal of the
> American Chemical Society7.78The
> Lancet928.18NAT
> IMMUNOL4.46J
> IMMUNOL7.56NAT
> GENET1028.17REV MOD
> PHYS4.28APPL PHYS
> LETT6.53Nature
> MedicineThe table shows the top
> 10 journals by ISI Impact
> Factor, PageRank, and a modified system that combines the
> two (based on 2003 data). Nature and Science are
> generally regarded as the most prestigious journals, and in
> the combined system they come out on top.The Eigenfactor is
> another PageRank-type
> measure of journal influence,[33] with
> rankings freely available online.[34][edit]Article level
> metricsStarting in March 2009,
> the Public Library
> of Science introduced "article level
> metrics[35] on
> every article in all of their titles.[edit]See
> also§  H-index,
> for the impact factor of individual scientists, rather than
> journals.§  PageRank,
> the algorithm used by Google,
> based on similar principles.§  Eigenfactor,
> another journal citation ranking method.§  SCImago Journal
> Rank, an open access journal metric which is
> based on Scopus data and uses an algorithm similar to
> PageRank.§  Lowry protein
> assay paper by Oliver
> Lowry - one of the most cited papers in the
> scientific literature (cited over 200,000
> times).[edit]References1.    
> ^ "Introducing
> the Impact Factor". Retrieved
> 2009-08-26.2.    
> ^ "JCR with
> Eigenfactor". Retrieved
> 2009-08-26.3.    
> ^ "Web of
> Knowledge > Real Facts > Quality and
> Quantity". Retrieved
> 2010-05-05.4.    
> ^ a b "European
> Association of Science Editors statement on impact
> factors". Retrieved
> 2009-03-25.5.    
> ^ Erjen van Nierop
> (2009). "Why do
> statistics journals have low impact
> factors?". Statistica
> Neerlandica 63 (1): 52–62.doi:10.1111/j.1467-9574.2008.00408.x.6.    
> ^ Mike Rossner, Heather Van Epps,
> and Emma Hill (December 17, 2007). "Show me
> the data". Journal of Cell
> Biology.7.    
> ^ "Thomson
> Scientific Corrects Inaccuracies In Editorial - Citation
> Impact Center - Thomson Reuters
> Forums". Retrieved
> 2009-08-31.8.    
> ^ Joint Committee on Quantitative
> Assessment of Research (June 12, 2008). "Citation
> Statistics" (PDF). International
> Mathematical Union.9.    
> ^ S.A. Marashi. On
> the identity of “citers”: are papers promptly recognized
> by other investigators? (2005) Med. Hypotheses 65,
> 822. PubMed 15990244.10.   ^ a b Eugene Garfield (June
> 1998). "The Impact
> Factor and Using It Correctly". Der
> Unfallchirurg 101 (6): 413–414.PMID 9677838.11.  
> ^ Gami AS, Montori VM, Wilczynski
> NL, Haynes RB (2004)."Author
> self-citation in the diabetes
> literature". CMAJ 170(13):
> 1925–7. doi:10.1503/cmaj.1031879. PMC 421720.PMID 15210641.12.  
> ^ Natasa Kovacic and Aleksandra
> Misak (2004). "Author
> self-citation in medical
> literature". CMAJ 170 (13):
> 1929–30.doi:10.1503/cmaj.1040513.13.  
> ^ Richard Monastersky (October
> 14, 2005). "The Number
> That's Devouring Science". The Chronicle
> of Higher Education.14.  
> ^ Douglas N.
> Arnold; Kristine K. Fowler (2011).
> "Nefarious Numbers". Notices of the
> American Mathematical
> Society 58(3): 434-437. arXiv:1010.0278.15.  
> ^ PLoS Medicine Editors (June 6,
> 2006). "The Impact
> Factor Game". PLoS
> Medicine (PLoS Medicine) 3 (6):
> e291.doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0030291. PMC 1475651.PMID 16749869.16.  
> ^ Agrawal A (2005). "Corruption
> of Journal Impact Factors".Trends in
> Ecology and
> Evolution 20 (4): 157.doi:10.1016/j.tree.2005.02.002. PMID 16701362.17.  
> ^ Fassoulaki A, Papilas K,
> Paraskeva A, Patris K (2002). "Impact factor bias and
> proposed adjustments for its determination". Acta
> Anaesthesiologica
> Scandinavica 46 (7):
> 902–5. doi:10.1034/j.1399-6576.2002.460723.x.PMID 12139549.18.  
> ^ Harm K. Schuttea, Jan G. Svec
> (2007). "Reaction of Folia Phoniatrica et
> Logopaedica on the Current Trend of Impact Factor
> Measures". Folia
> Phoniatrica et
> Logopaedica 59 (6):
> 281–285. doi:10.1159/000108334. PMID 17965570.19.  
> ^ "Journal
> Citation Reports - Notices". Retrieved
> 2009-09-24.20.  
> ^ New impact
> factors yield surprises - The Scientist - Magazine of the
> Life Sciences21.  
> ^ What does it
> mean to be #2 in Impact? - Thomson Reuters
> Community22.  
> ^ Seglen PO (1997). "Why the
> impact factor of journals should not be used for evaluating
> research". BMJ 314 (7079):
> 498–502. PMC 2126010. PMID 9056804. Free
> PDF download for the public.23.  
> ^ "Not-so-deep
> impact" (This editorial is available
> free of
> charge.). Nature 435 (7045):
> 1003–4. June 23, 2005.doi:10.1038/4351003b. PMID 15973362.24.  
> ^ "House of
> Commons - Science and Technology - Tenth
> Report". 2004-07-07. Retrieved
> 2008-07-28.25.  
> ^ International
> Council for Science statement26.  
> ^ DFG press release
> (http://www.dfg.de/en/service/press/press_releases/2010/pressemitteilung_nr_07/index.html)27.  
> ^ Impact Factor,
> Immediacy Index, Cited Half-life28.  
> ^ Gabriel Pinski and Francis
> Narin (1976). "Citation influence for journal
> aggregates of scientific publications: Theory with
> application to literature of
> physics". Information Processing &
> Management 12: 297–312. doi:10.1016/0306-4573(76)90048-0.29.  
> ^ S. J. Liebowitz and J. P.
> Palmer. (1984). "Assessing
> the relative impacts of economics
> journals". Journal of Economic
> Literature (American Economic
> Association) 22 (1):
> 77–88.30.  
> ^ I. Palacios-Huerta and O. Volij
> (2004). "The measurement of intellectual
> influence". Econometrica 72:
> 963–977.doi:10.1111/j.1468-0262.2004.00519.x.31.  
> ^ Y. K. Kodrzycki and P. D. Yu
> (2006). "New approaches to ranking economics
> journals". B. E. Journal of Economics Analysis
> and Policy 5. doi:10.2202/1538-0645.1520.32.  
> ^ Johan Bollen, Marko A.
> Rodriguez, and Herbert Van de Sompel. (December
> 2006). "Journal
> Status". Scientometrics69 (3).33.  
> ^ C. T.
> Bergstrom. (May 2007). "Eigenfactor:
> Measuring the value and prestige of scholarly
> journals". College & Research
> Libraries
> News 68 (5).34.  
> ^ eigenfactor.org35.  
> ^ Article-Level
> Metrics Information[edit]External
> links§  List of ranking
> and impact factor by Sci-Bytes§  "Journal
> Citation Reports". Retrieved
> 2009-07-18.§  Does the
> 'Impact Factor' Impact Decisions on Where to
> Publish?, American
> Physical Society. Accessed:
> 2010-07=10.§  2008 statement
> on inappropriate use of impact factors, published
> by the European
> Association of Science Editors§  UK science will
> be judged by peer review. Nature 468, 357.
> November 17, 2010 Gilbert, Natasha (2010).
> "UK science will be judged on
> impact". Nature 468:
> 357. doi:10.1038/468357a.PMID 21085146.Categories: Bibliometrics | Academic
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#1539 From: "Group Moderator ISOSS" <chaudary_afnan@...>
Date: Mon Mar 14, 2011 3:21 pm
Subject: Webmaster-- ISOSS Website
chaudary_afnan
Send Email Send Email
 

Dear Members

It is informed you that you can contact our website development department at e-mail: webmaster@... for ISOSS website related queries / feedbacks/Complaints.

Thanks for your feedbacks/suggestions.

Regards.

---

Muhammad Afnan

I.T Manager

ISOSS, Lahore

Pakistan

Email: it-manager@...

 


#1540 From: Mehvish Hussain <mehvish.hussain@...>
Date: Thu Mar 17, 2011 5:07 am
Subject: EDULEARN11
mehvish.hussain
Send Email Send Email
 
 
It may be interesting for some ISOSS group members, specially for a student from university of Gujrat, who presented "use of animation in teaching" at 8th ISOSS conference - Lahore (Feb 8-9, 2011).


EDULEARN11 (3rd International Conference on Education and New Learning
Technologies)
4th, 5th and 6th of July, 2011
Barcelona (Spain)
Website: http://www.edulearn11.org

The deadline to submit your abstract is 31st of March 2011. You can do it at:
http://www.edulearn11.org/submit

EDULEARN11 will be an excellent opportunity to present your projects and
discuss the latest results in the field of Experiences in Education,
E-learning and New Technologies applied to teaching and learning. Its main
objective is to promote and disseminate the educational experiences in all
fields and disciplines.

This conference will be held at international level. The attendance of more
than 700 delegates from 70 different countries is expected. 

You can present your papers in 3 presentation modalities: ORAL, POSTER or VIRTUAL.

Two ISBN publications will be produced with the accepted abstracts and papers:
EDULEARN11 Abstract CD and EDULEARN11 Proceedings CD.

Apart from the professional experience, you will be able to enjoy the
cosmopolitan city of Barcelona, its historical places, its lovely beaches and
unique gastronomy.

We look forward to seeing you in Barcelona next July!
Kind regards,

EDULEARN11 Technical Secretariat
Email:edulearn11@...

----------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------


#1541 From: "Group Moderator ISOSS" <chaudary_afnan@...>
Date: Thu Mar 17, 2011 6:09 pm
Subject: ISOSS Website (Re-Located ) www.isoss.net
chaudary_afnan
Send Email Send Email
 

Dear ISOSS Members.

 

 

We are pleased to inform you that Website of Islamic Countries Society of Statistical Sciences Lahore has changed from URLwww.isoss.com.pk   to  URL : www.isoss.net  with effect from 16-March-2011.  

 

The change of website address does not affect the existing operation of this organization.

 

Our current website of ISOSS www.isoss.net  has been hosted in  Houston, Texas, USA

 

 

Please click the following link to connect you to our new website  www.isoss.net

 

For Further Details :

 

Email: secretary@...

 

Webmaster: webmaster@...

 

Manager I.T : it-manager@...

 

 

Regards

--------------

Muhammad Afnan

I.T. Department

ISOSS, Lahore

Pakistan


#1542 From: "Group Moderator ISOSS" <chaudary_afnan@...>
Date: Thu Mar 17, 2011 6:31 pm
Subject: Access TO ISOSS Gallery (For ISOSS Members) Only
chaudary_afnan
Send Email Send Email
 

Dear Members

It is announced that all ISOSS members can view conferences/seminars snaps at ISOSS website at URL : www.isoss.net/gallery

For security purpose we uploaded the snaps with LOGIN & PASSWORD environment .So if any participant / ISOSS member want to see the ISOSS gallery then please forward your request for Login ID & Password through this link:

http://www.isoss.net/onlinerequest.php

And send us the following FORM for your LOGIN to gallery and after submission of your request your Login ID with Password will forward you via email address in 24 hours .

------------------------------------

Request for Login / Password

------------------------------------

*All fields are mandatory

Full (First Name + Second Name:  **First Name: ________: **Second Name: __________

Desired Login: (only 5 alphabets i.e Aa ,Bb ,Cc......) :___________

Desired Password: (only 5 alphabets i.e abcdcDEF....):_______________

Email address: _______________

Gallery URL : http://www.isoss.net/gallery

-------------------------------------

-------------------------------------

Thanks

Regards

-----------------

Muhammad Afnan

Manager I.T.

ISOSS Lahore

Pakistan

Email: it-manager@...

 


#1544 From: "Group Moderator ISOSS" <chaudary_afnan@...>
Date: Fri Mar 18, 2011 6:01 am
Subject: Re: Access TO ISOSS Gallery (For ISOSS Members) Only
chaudary_afnan
Send Email Send Email
 

Dear Member (Dr.Faisal Qadeer(

It is requested you to please click on this link : http://www.isoss.net/onlinerequest.php and send your request again through the mentioned link .

Yahoo Group is an OPEN FORUM so please don't submit your request in the reply at ISOSS GROUP .The above said link is available for submission of all request.

Link to submit requests: http://www.isoss.net/onlinerequest.php

We will send your Login / Password as soon as possible .The snaps of convocation at NCBAE dated 16-3-2011 will be available soon.

Regards

---

Muhammad Afnan

I.T Department

ISOSS Lahore

Pakistan


--- In isoss@yahoogroups.com, Dr Faisal Qadeer <mfaisalqr@...> wrote:
>
>
> Dear IT Manager
> AOA
>
> Request for Login / Password
>
> First Name: Dr Faisal : Second Name: Qadeer
> Desired Login: (only 5 alphabets i.e Aa ,Bb ,Cc......) : azmfq
> Desired Password: (only 5 alphabets i.e abcdcDEF....): shafiq
> Email address: mfaisalqr@...
>
> Thanks
>
> Regards
> Dr Faisal Qadeer
>
>
>
> To: isoss@yahoogroups.com
> From: chaudary_afnan@...
> Date: Thu, 17 Mar 2011 18:31:16 +0000
> Subject: [isoss] Access TO ISOSS Gallery (For ISOSS Members) Only
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Dear Members
> It is announced that all ISOSS members can view conferences/seminars snaps at ISOSS website at URL : www.isoss.net/gallery
> For security purpose we uploaded the snaps with LOGIN & PASSWORD environment .So if any participant / ISOSS member want to see the ISOSS gallery then please forward your request for Login ID & Password through this link:
> http://www.isoss.net/onlinerequest.php
> And send us the following FORM for your LOGIN to gallery and after submission of your request your Login ID with Password will forward you via email address in 24 hours .
> ------------------------------------
> Request for Login / Password
> ------------------------------------
> *All fields are mandatory
> Full (First Name + Second Name: **First Name: ________: **Second Name: __________
> Desired Login: (only 5 alphabets i.e Aa ,Bb ,Cc......) :___________
> Desired Password: (only 5 alphabets i.e abcdcDEF....):_______________
> Email address: _______________
> Gallery URL : http://www.isoss.net/gallery
> -------------------------------------
> -------------------------------------
> Thanks
> Regards
> -----------------
> Muhammad Afnan
> Manager I.T.
> ISOSS Lahore
> Pakistan
> Email: it-manager@...
>

#1545 From: "Group Moderator ISOSS" <chaudary_afnan@...>
Date: Fri Mar 18, 2011 6:15 am
Subject: For Information (ISOSS MEMBERS)
chaudary_afnan
Send Email Send Email
 

Dear Members

It is requested that all members will use this link http://www.isoss.net/onlinerequest.php for every kind of request/queries/questions/complaints with auto ticket generated system.

This will be helpful for us to track user's queries in details or for future references

Regards

 ---

I.T Department

ISOSS Lahore

Pakistan


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