In order to facilitate the work of highlighting and analysing scientific production, ORBi offers a series of bibliometric indicators in the form of graphs. These indicators were produced developed by ULiège researchers and ULiège Library,. Our team remains available for all your questions and suggestions.
MyIndicators are available from "MyORBi" menu.
The indicators are calculated for all the ORBi references returned by the query performed.
By default, the search is for the user's ID, but you can modify the query to create a report of indicators:
It is possible to display only the indicators considered relevant to your research sector via the "Sector" filter (STM, SHS).
By default, the indicators relate to publications from the last 20 years, but this filter can also be changed if necessary.
Export possibilities are available for each graph (export of the graph as an image or PDF, export of the data in spreadsheet format).
Note: In line graphs, lines can be toggled on and off with a click in the legend in order to highlight the desired data.
Line graph of the number of publications by publication year with the total number, the number of publications with a full text and the number of publications in OA. Possibility to filter on a particular type of document: articles, PR (peer reviewed) articles, parts of books.
Line graph showing the percentage of Open Access by year of publication with a comparison of the percentage of publications with full text (open or restricted access).
Bar graph showing the number of articles with peer review or editorial review by year of publication.
Top 20 scientific journals in which the most articles have been published.
Word cloud with the keywords of the posts. The most frequent keywords have a larger font and are therefore more visible. Note that the same term with different spellings will be considered as several keywords.
Percentage of UMONS members in the co-authors of publications. It should be noted that all co-authors must normally appear in the publications deposited on ORBi.
Top 20 affiliations of non-ULiège co-authors most represented in the references. This graph only relates to the affiliations that have been entered in the references deposited on ORBi (either via the import of the reference or manually). It is therefore very important to ensure that the affiliations of the co-authors are added as much as possible.
Note that the distinction between affiliations relates to the complete affiliation and not to the institution alone, so we can find here an institution that is provided in a global way (a university for example) and also departments or laboratories belonging to this institution. Also note that different spellings of the same affiliations can be recognized as different affiliations.
H index for each citation source available in ORBi calculated on all the articles in the query.
H index for each citation source available in ORBi calculated by year of publication.
Line graph showing the total number of citations received by all articles published in the given year on the x-axis. Each citation source is represented by a different line.
Citations are added to ORBi references automatically using unique identifiers such as DOI. If your publication has a DOI, import it through that DOI or add it manually to the reference. If your publication is correctly referenced (title, first author, correct year of publication, journal) then ORBi can also find this DOI automatically. Correct publication information is therefore very important.
Line graph showing the average number of citations (each citation source is represented by a different line) by year of publication.
The 20 most cited peer-reviewed scientific journal articles (all citation sources combined). Click on each title to open the detailed publication on ORBi.
This chart only works if your query is for ULiège authors:
It then presents the percentage of publications in which the authors of the query are (co-)first or (co-)last authors.
The 20 most frequent book publishers in the books and book chapters of the query result.
The percentage of articles published in scientific journals in Q1 Scimago. It is calculated on the basis of articles whose year of publication is covered by the Scimago ranking, so the most recent articles are not included.
These are the journals that are found in the top quartile of the SCIMAGO Journal and Country Rank (SJR) for each field of research. This ranking of the journals indexed by Scopus is based on the citations received by the articles of each journal in the previous three years.
These are therefore the 25% most prestigious journals in this ranking for a given field of research and in a given year of publication. The same newspaper could therefore be in Q1 Scimago for some areas it covers but not others. Similarly, it could be in Q1 Scimago in these areas for some years of publication and not others.
Guerrero-Bote, V. & Moya-Anegón, F. (2012). A Further Step Forward in Measuring Journals' Scientific Prestige: The SJR2 Indicator. Journal of Informetrics, vol. 6(4), pp. 674-688. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joi.2012.07.001
Line graph showing, for each year of publication, the total number of articles in the query result that were published in a journal in Q1 Scimago for at least one field of research. An article is considered to be published in a journal in Q1 Scimago only if the journal in question was in Q1 Scimago for the year in which the article in question was published.
Line graphs showing for each year of publication the total number of articles in the query published in a journal that is in Scimago Q1 for a given research area. An article is considered to be published in a journal in Q1 Scimago in a certain field of research only if the journal in question was in Q1 Scimago for that field of research and for the year of publication of the article in question.
A graph is obtained for each field of research, for each field of research in which there is at least one article in a Q1 Scimago journal.