Datebook 1 0 6 – Journal

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Journal automatically records actions that you choose which relate to specific contacts and puts the actions in a Timeline view. You can use Journal to track Microsoft Outlook items, such as e-mail messages or meetings. Datebook is the San Francisco Chronicle's guide to Books in the Bay Area, combining award-winning news coverage with a curated events calendar.

CiteScore (CS) of an academic journal is a measure reflecting the yearly average number of citations to recent articles published in that journal. This journal evaluation metric was launched in December 2016 by Elsevier as an alternative to the generally used JCRimpact factors (calculated by Clarivate). CiteScore is based on the citations recorded in the Scopus database rather than in JCR, and those citations are collected for articles published in the preceding four years instead of two or five.

Calculation[edit]

In any given year, the CiteScore of a journal is the number of citations, received in that year and previous 3 years, for documents published in the journal during that period (four years), divided by the total number of published documents (articles, reviews, conference papers, book chapters, and data papers) in the journal during the same four-year period:[1]

CSy=Citationsy+Citationsy−1+Citationsy−2+Citationsy−3Publicationsy+Publicationsy−1+Publicationsy−2+Publicationsy−3{displaystyle {text{CS}}_{y}={{text{Citations}}_{y}+{text{Citations}}_{y-1}+{text{Citations}}_{y-2}+{text{Citations}}_{y-3} over {text{Publications}}_{y}+{text{Publications}}_{y-1}+{text{Publications}}_{y-2}+{text{Publications}}_{y-3}}}

Moneydance 2017 10 – personal finance manager. For example, Nature had a CiteScore 2019[2] of 51.0

CS2019=Citations2019+Citations2018+Citations2017+Citations2016Publications2019+Publications2018+Publications2017+Publications2016=2438944786=51.0{displaystyle {text{CS}}_{2019}={{text{Citations}}_{2019}+{text{Citations}}_{2018}+{text{Citations}}_{2017}+{text{Citations}}_{2016} over {text{Publications}}_{2019}+{text{Publications}}_{2018}+{text{Publications}}_{2017}+{text{Publications}}_{2016}}={243894 over 4786}=51.0}

Note that for example the 2017 CiteScores were reported first in 2018 when all data was available completely. CiteScores are typically released in late May,[3] approximately one month earlier than the JCR impact factors.[4] Note also the calculation date for each given CiteScore as later additions, corrections or deletions to the data will not lead to a score update.[5] Scopus also provides the projected CiteScores for the next year, which are updated every month.[1]

Old calculation[edit]

Before 2020 the score was calculated differently: In a given year, the CiteScore of a journal was the number of citations, received in that year, of articles published in that journal during the three preceding years, divided by the total number of 'citable items' published in that journal during the three preceding years:[1]

CSy=CitationsyPublicationsy−1+Publicationsy−2+Publicationsy−3{displaystyle {text{CS}}_{y}={{text{Citations}}_{y} over {text{Publications}}_{y-1}+{text{Publications}}_{y-2}+{text{Publications}}_{y-3}}}

For example, Nature had a CiteScore of 14.456 in 2017:

CS2017=Citations2017Publications2016+Publications2015+Publications2014=1146397860=14.59{displaystyle {text{CS}}_{2017}={{text{Citations}}_{2017} over {text{Publications}}_{2016}+{text{Publications}}_{2015}+{text{Publications}}_{2014}}={114639 over 7860}=14.59}


Because the calculation method changed, knowing the calculation date is an important detail when comparing CiteScores. For example the Nature CiteScore in 2017, but calculated with the method of 2020, is 53.7.[6]

CiteScore vs. Journal Impact Factor[edit]

CiteScore vs. IF for American Chemical Society (ACS, green) and Nature group journals (blue), 2017 data. The values for Nature journals lie well above the expected ca. 1:1 linear dependence because those journals contain a significant fraction of editorials.

CiteScore was designed to compete with the two-year JCR impact factor, which is currently the most widely used journal metric.[7][8] Their main differences are as follows:[9]

Datebook 1 0 6 – Journalist

ParameterJCR IFCiteScore
Evaluation period (years)24
DatabaseJCRScopus
No. indexed journals (2016)11,00022,000
AccessSubscribersAnyone
Evaluated itemsArticles, reviewsAll publications
Datebook 1 0 6 – Journal

Another difference is the definition of the 'number of publications' or 'citable items'.[9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcJournal Metrics – FAQs. journalmetrics.scopus.com
  2. ^calculated with data queried on May 6, 2020
  3. ^Elsevier releases 2017 CiteScore™ values. elsevier.com. 31 May 2018
  4. ^Journal Citation Reports 2018Archived 2019-05-02 at the Wayback Machine. clarivate.com. 26 June 2018
  5. ^For instance May 6, 2020 for CiteScore 2019 of Artificial Intelligence Review.
  6. ^CiteScore 2017 243783/4539=53.7
  7. ^Gray, Edward (2008). 'Comparison of Journal Citation Reports and Scopus Impact Factors for Ecology and Environmental Sciences Journals'. doi:10.5062/F4FF3Q9G.Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  8. ^Journal Citation Reports: JCR. The University of Notre Dame Australia
  9. ^ abVan Noorden, Richard (2016). 'Controversial impact factor gets a heavyweight rival'. Nature. 540 (7633): 325–326. Bibcode:2016Natur.540.325V. doi:10.1038/nature.2016.21131. PMID27974784.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=CiteScore&oldid=1004247459'
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  • Future-proof: data is stored in plain text files
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RedNotebook is a desktop journal

It lets you format, tag and search your entries. You can also add pictures, links and customizable templates, spell check your notes, and export to plain text, HTML or LaTeX. RedNotebook is Free Software under the GPL.

Announcement - Changelog

RedNotebook 2.0 on Ubuntu

Imazing 2 6 1 (9057). RedNotebook 2.0 - Preview Mode

Datebook 1 0 6 – Journalism

Version 2.21 released - 2020-12-07

  • Update MathJax to version 3 (#515, @dgcampea).
  • Fix date references in CEF-based HtmlView (#544, Paweł Żukowski).

Version 2.20 released - 2020-08-03

  • Fix drag and drop (#492, @dgcampea).
  • Fix external previews (Eric Chazan).
  • Document how to change the theme on Windows (#487, Ankur A. Sharma).
  • Allow symlinking to `./run` script (#509).

Version 2.19 released - 2020-05-04

Datebook 1 0 6 – Journal Article

  • Reload GTK theme colors when saving the journal (#485).
  • Don't use dark mode for exported HTML files (#486).
  • Use PNG version instead of SVG for RedNotebook icons to avoid problems on macOS.
  • Use GitHub actions for continuous integration testing.

Version 2.18 released - 2020-02-29

  • Use background and foreground colors from GTK theme for HTML preview.

Version 2.17 released - 2020-02-23

  • Fix HTML colors for dark themes (#474).

Version 2.16 released - 2020-01-23

  • Add menu items for adding titles (#464, Paweł Żukowski).
  • Upgrade msgfmt.py to version 1.2 (#470).

Version 2.15 released - 2019-12-04

  • Fix tray icon on Windows (#394).

Version 2.14 released - 2019-11-17

  • Support entry reference links in exported HTML (#452, Paweł Żukowski).
  • Add support for dark themes to cloud panel (#438).

Version 2.13 released - 2019-11-07

  • Change unnamed date references from 2019-11-06 to [2019-11-06] (#458, #460, Paweł Żukowski).
  • Add option for controlling number of displayed tags (#456, Paweł Żukowski).
  • Fix setting maximum number of displayed tags (#461).

Version 2.12 released - 2019-11-02

  • Allow linking between days with dates like 2019-02-14 and `[named links 2019-02-14]` (#176, #444, Paweł Żukowski).
  • Allow opening statistics dialog multiple times in one session (#370, #457, Paweł Żukowski).
  • Warn about outdated backups every week by default.
  • Increase default width of left panel to ensure that the calendar is fully visible (#376).
Datebook

Another difference is the definition of the 'number of publications' or 'citable items'.[9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcJournal Metrics – FAQs. journalmetrics.scopus.com
  2. ^calculated with data queried on May 6, 2020
  3. ^Elsevier releases 2017 CiteScore™ values. elsevier.com. 31 May 2018
  4. ^Journal Citation Reports 2018Archived 2019-05-02 at the Wayback Machine. clarivate.com. 26 June 2018
  5. ^For instance May 6, 2020 for CiteScore 2019 of Artificial Intelligence Review.
  6. ^CiteScore 2017 243783/4539=53.7
  7. ^Gray, Edward (2008). 'Comparison of Journal Citation Reports and Scopus Impact Factors for Ecology and Environmental Sciences Journals'. doi:10.5062/F4FF3Q9G.Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  8. ^Journal Citation Reports: JCR. The University of Notre Dame Australia
  9. ^ abVan Noorden, Richard (2016). 'Controversial impact factor gets a heavyweight rival'. Nature. 540 (7633): 325–326. Bibcode:2016Natur.540.325V. doi:10.1038/nature.2016.21131. PMID27974784.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=CiteScore&oldid=1004247459'
  • Insert #hashtags
  • Format text bold, italic or underlined
  • Insert images, files and links
  • Spell check
  • Search-as-you-type
  • Automatic saving
  • Backup to zip archive
  • Word clouds with most common words and tags
  • Templates
  • Export to plain text, HTML or Latex
  • Future-proof: data is stored in plain text files
  • Private: you own your data
  • Translated into more than 30 languages

RedNotebook is a desktop journal

It lets you format, tag and search your entries. You can also add pictures, links and customizable templates, spell check your notes, and export to plain text, HTML or LaTeX. RedNotebook is Free Software under the GPL.

Announcement - Changelog

RedNotebook 2.0 on Ubuntu

Imazing 2 6 1 (9057). RedNotebook 2.0 - Preview Mode

Datebook 1 0 6 – Journalism

Version 2.21 released - 2020-12-07

  • Update MathJax to version 3 (#515, @dgcampea).
  • Fix date references in CEF-based HtmlView (#544, Paweł Żukowski).

Version 2.20 released - 2020-08-03

  • Fix drag and drop (#492, @dgcampea).
  • Fix external previews (Eric Chazan).
  • Document how to change the theme on Windows (#487, Ankur A. Sharma).
  • Allow symlinking to `./run` script (#509).

Version 2.19 released - 2020-05-04

Datebook 1 0 6 – Journal Article

  • Reload GTK theme colors when saving the journal (#485).
  • Don't use dark mode for exported HTML files (#486).
  • Use PNG version instead of SVG for RedNotebook icons to avoid problems on macOS.
  • Use GitHub actions for continuous integration testing.

Version 2.18 released - 2020-02-29

  • Use background and foreground colors from GTK theme for HTML preview.

Version 2.17 released - 2020-02-23

  • Fix HTML colors for dark themes (#474).

Version 2.16 released - 2020-01-23

  • Add menu items for adding titles (#464, Paweł Żukowski).
  • Upgrade msgfmt.py to version 1.2 (#470).

Version 2.15 released - 2019-12-04

  • Fix tray icon on Windows (#394).

Version 2.14 released - 2019-11-17

  • Support entry reference links in exported HTML (#452, Paweł Żukowski).
  • Add support for dark themes to cloud panel (#438).

Version 2.13 released - 2019-11-07

  • Change unnamed date references from 2019-11-06 to [2019-11-06] (#458, #460, Paweł Żukowski).
  • Add option for controlling number of displayed tags (#456, Paweł Żukowski).
  • Fix setting maximum number of displayed tags (#461).

Version 2.12 released - 2019-11-02

  • Allow linking between days with dates like 2019-02-14 and `[named links 2019-02-14]` (#176, #444, Paweł Żukowski).
  • Allow opening statistics dialog multiple times in one session (#370, #457, Paweł Żukowski).
  • Warn about outdated backups every week by default.
  • Increase default width of left panel to ensure that the calendar is fully visible (#376).
For the full list of changes have a look at theChangelog.



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