To optimize or not to optimize one’s h-Index – that is the question…

Bertil F. Dorch, Evgenios Vlachos, Daniella Bayle Deutz, Charlotte Wien

Research output: Contribution to conference without publisher/journalConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Abstract

The h-index is an author-level metric that attempts to measure both the productivity, and the citation impact of scholarly publications. When proposing the h-index in his frequently cited 2005 paper, Hirsch stressed that the index could “never give more than a rough approximation to an individual's multifaceted profile”. Despite Hirsch’s original reservations, the h-index is indeed a very popular, and relatively simple measure. While simplicity may be the main reason for its popularity, it may at the same time be its vulnerability: A simple measure cannot incorporate the entire complexity of scholarly communication, or of the profile of an academic career.
Our point of departure differs from the vast body of literature discussing the h-index, criticizing its merits, and/or suggesting alternative measures. We accept the existence, and use of the h-index, but are critical towards it being used as an impact indicator on its own. We focus on how individual researchers can in principle strategically optimize their own h-index, and on the strategies used by such “high h-index researchers”.
To investigate researcher behavior, we extracted the publication data of 75 researchers affiliated with the Department of Clinical Research at the University of Southern Denmark (SDU). We created scatter plots of their publications and citations, and identified the outliers as either high h-index researchers, or low h-index researchers. Semi-structured qualitative research interviews were conducted with high and low h-index researchers to extract their respective publication strategies (if any). Indications are that the high h-index researchers reflect on their performance measures, and work strategically with increasing their own performance in accordance with such measures, while the low h-index researchers are less conscious about such measures. In our paper, we describe the differences between the two groups, and discuss the implications of our findings.
Original languageEnglish
Publication date5. Jul 2018
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5. Jul 2018
EventLIBER Annual Conference 2018 - LILLIAD, Lille, France
Duration: 4. Jul 20186. Jul 2018
https://libereurope.eu/events/liber-2018-lille-annual-conference/

Conference

ConferenceLIBER Annual Conference 2018
LocationLILLIAD
Country/TerritoryFrance
CityLille
Period04/07/201806/07/2018
Internet address

Keywords

  • Citation Analysis
  • Bibliometrics
  • Research Evaluation
  • Scholarly communication

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'To optimize or not to optimize one’s h-Index – that is the question…'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
  • GAMEX: Research Theme 4: Game of Research Indicators

    Wien, C. (PI), Dorch, B. (Co-PI), Vlachos, E. (Project participant), Larsen, A. V. (Project participant), Drachen, T. M. (Project participant) & Deutz, D. (Project participant)

    03/03/201831/12/2022

    Project: Research

  • Gaming the h-index ..?

    Wien, C. (Project manager), Dorch, B. (Project participant), Deutz, D. (Project participant), Vlachos, E. (Project participant) & Drongstrup, D. (Project participant)

    01/01/201831/12/2020

    Project: Research

Cite this