Is PeerJ a credible source?

Is PeerJ a credible source?

PeerJ is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, scholarly journal. It considers articles in the Biological Sciences, Medical Sciences, and Health Sciences (see the website for a complete list). It does not accept Literature Review Articles, Commentaries, Opinion Pieces, Case Studies, Case Reports etc.

Is PeerJ peer-reviewed?

Our flagship journal, PeerJ is a peer-reviewed Open Access journal in the Biological, Medical and Environmental Sciences.

Is PeerJ Scopus indexed?

PeerJ is indexed in all major Abstracting & Indexing databases. Publications are indexed in the Web of Science, Google Scholar, dblp, CiteSeerX, Scopus, DOAJ, the Proquest databases, OCLC, Inspec, Inspec Analytics and ScienceOpen.

How do you cite PeerJ?

PeerJ

  1. Citation Style: Author-Year.
  2. Date: Tuesday, August 25, 2015.
  3. Discipline: Life Science.
  4. File Name: PeerJ.ens.
  5. Publisher: PeerJ.
  6. URL: https://peerj.com/about/author-instructions/
  7. Based On:
  8. Bibliography Sort Order: Author-Year-Title.

Is PeerJ open access?

PeerJ Physical Chemistry is a peer-reviewed and Open Access journal, publishing primary research and reviews in subjects including biophysical chemistry, molecular dynamics, electrochemistry, theoretical and computational chemistry.

What is a good H index in medicine?

H-index scores between 3 and 5 seem common for new assistant professors, scores between 8 and 12 fairly standard for promotion to the position of tenured associate professor, and scores between 15 and 20 about right for becoming a full professor.

What is a average H-index required for academic positions?

We found that, on average, assistant professors have an h-index of 2-5, associate professors 6-10, and full professors 12-24. These are mean or median values only—the distribution of values at each rank is very wide. If you hope to win a Nobel Prize, your h-index should be at least 35 and preferably closer to 70.

How is H-index of publication calculated?

Your h-index is based on a list of your publications ranked in descending order by the Times Cited count. The value of h is equal to the number of papers (N) in the list that have N or more citations.

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