Why the impact factor of journals should not be used for evaluating research

Volume: 314, Issue: 7079, Pages: 497 - 497
Published: Feb 15, 1997
Abstract
Evaluating scientific quality is a notoriously difficult problem which has no standard solution. Ideally, published scientific results should be scrutinised by true experts in the field and given scores for quality and quantity according to established rules. In practice, however, what is called peer review is usually performed by committees with general competence rather than with the specialist's insight that is needed to assess primary...
Paper Details
Title
Why the impact factor of journals should not be used for evaluating research
Published Date
Feb 15, 1997
Journal
Volume
314
Issue
7079
Pages
497 - 497
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