中文摘要 |
As we editorialized in our last issue, the international scientific community has increasingly rejected the Journal Impact Factor (often called SCI or Science Citation Index) as a valid measure of the worth of scholarly output.1 Yet today, certainly in most or all of Asia, publication in a journal with a high impact factor remains, it seems, the primary measure by which scholars are hired and promoted into academic positions and a major criterion by which research funding applications are considered. The United States leads the world in the publicat |