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The p-index: Ranking Scientists Using Network Dynamics
Author(s) -
U.M. Senanayake,
Mahendra Piraveenan,
Albert Y. Zomaya
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
procedia computer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.334
H-Index - 76
ISSN - 1877-0509
DOI - 10.1016/j.procs.2014.05.042
Subject(s) - pagerank , computer science , ranking (information retrieval) , metric (unit) , index (typography) , citation , rank (graph theory) , field (mathematics) , information retrieval , network science , data science , percentile , data mining , complex network , world wide web , statistics , mathematics , operations management , combinatorics , pure mathematics , economics
The indices currently used by scholarly databases, such as Google scholar, to rank scientists, do not attach weights to the citations. Neither is the underlying network structure of citations considered in computing these metrics. This results in scientists cited by well-recognized journals not being rewarded, and may lead to potential misuse if documents are created purely to cite others. In this paper we introduce a new ranking metric, the p-index (pagerank-index), which is computed from the underlying citation network of papers, and uses the pagerank algorithm in its computation. The index is a percentile score, and can potentially be implemented in public databases such as Google scholar, and can be applied at many levels of abstraction. We demonstrate that the metric aids in fairer ranking of scientists compared to h-index and its variants. We do this by simulating a realistic model of the evolution of citation and collaboration networks in a particular field, and comparing h-index and p-index of scientists under a number of scenarios. Our results show that the p-index is immune to author behaviors that can result in artificially bloated h-index values

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