Congratulations to HALO Senior Scientist Dr. Mark Tremblay on his contributions to a new paper from the USERN (Universal Scientific Education and Research Network) collaboration titled “Universal Research Index: An inclusive metric to quantify scientific research output” just published in the Journal of Academic Librarianship. Citation details and a summary of the paper are below.

Keshavarz-Fathi, M., Yazdanpanah, N., Kolahchi, S., Ziaei, H., Darmstadt, G. L., Dorigo, T., Dochy, F., Levin, L., Thongboonkerd, V., Ogino, S., Chen, W.-H., Perc, M., Tremblay, M. S., Olusanya, B. O., Rao, I. M., Hatziargyriou, N., Moradi-Lakeh, M., Bella, F., Rosivall, L., … Rezaei, N. (2023). Universal research index: An inclusive metric to quantify scientific research output. The Journal of Academic Librarianship, 49(3), 102714. https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ACALIB.2023.102714
 
ABSTRACT 

Scientometrics and bibliometrics, the subfields of library and information science, deal with the quantity and quality of research outputs. Currently, various scientometric indices are being used to quantify and compare research outputs. The most widely known is the h-index. However, this index and its derivatives suffer from dependence on the mere count of a scholar’s highly cited publications. To remedy this deficiency, we developed a novel index, the Universal Research Index (UR-Index) (https://usern2021.github.io/UR-Index/) by which every single publication has its own impact on the total score. We developed this index by surveying international top 1 % cited scientists in various disciplines and included additional component variables such as publication type, leading role of a scholar, co-author count, and source metrics to this scientometric index. We acknowledge that unconscious biases built into the component variables included in the UR-Index might put research from specific groups at a disadvantage, thus continued efforts to improve equitable scholarly impact in science and academia are encouraged.

The full article is available here.