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According to the Scopus CiteScore percentile system, which quartile does a journal fall into if its percentile is 72%?
A. Q3
B. Q2
C. Q1
D. Q4
Answer: B. Q2
Explanation: Q2 covers percentiles from 50% up to 74.9%, making a 72% journal a Q2 journal.
What is the primary reason a journal might show up as Q2 on Scopus but Q4 on SCImago (SJR) for the exact same year?
A. SCImago uses a prestige-weighted formula (SJR), while Scopus CiteScore uses a simple citation ratio.
B. Scopus artificially inflates the rankings of new journals.
C. SCImago only tracks open-access journals.
D. SCImago is always outdated and abandoned by publishers.
Answer: A. SCImago uses a prestige-weighted formula (SJR), while Scopus CiteScore uses a simple citation ratio.
Explanation: CiteScore treats all citations equally, whereas SJR weights citations based on the prestige of the citing journal, leading to different quartile rankings.
How frequently does the Scopus CiteScore Tracker update its metric values during the current year?
A. Every day
B. Monthly
C. Once a year
D. Every week
Answer: B. Monthly
Explanation: The CiteScore Tracker provides real-time monthly updates to give researchers a current view of a journal's trajectory.
If a university graduation requirement states that a student 'must publish in an SJR Q2 journal,' which platform's quartile must the student verify?
A. Google Scholar Metrics
B. SCImago Journal Rank (SJR)
C. Any third-party impact factor tool
D. Scopus CiteScore
Answer: B. SCImago Journal Rank (SJR)
Explanation: SJR stands for SCImago Journal Rank, meaning the student must use SCImago's metrics to satisfy this specific institutional requirement.
Which of the following is true regarding accessing journal metric data on Scopus?
A. An institutional login is required to access the basic 'Sources' metrics page.
B. You must pay a premium subscription fee to see percentiles.
C. It can only be viewed via a third-party API application.
D. Anyone can access scopus.com/sources to check journal percentiles for free.
Answer: D. Anyone can access scopus.com/sources to check journal percentiles for free.
Explanation: Scopus allows free public access to its source list, allowing anyone to evaluate journal metrics without a login.
When reviewing a journal's profile page on Scopus, where can a researcher verify if a journal is still actively indexed or has been discontinued?
A. By looking at the 'Scopus coverage years' field on the source homepage.
B. By verifying if the journal has an alternative ISSN.
C. By observing if the CiteScore is an integer or a decimal value.
D. By checking the publisher's copyright notice at the bottom of the webpage.
Answer: A. By looking at the 'Scopus coverage years' field on the source homepage.
Explanation: The coverage status explicitly indicates if coverage is ongoing or if it lists a specific end year alongside a 'discontinued' notice.
What is a safe search method to ensure you are viewing the correct journal on Scopus if multiple publications have similar titles?
A. Relying on the first keyword option suggested by auto-correct.
B. Searching by the publisher's country origin.
C. Searching exclusively by the journal's unique ISSN.
D. Sorting alphabetical results from Z to A.
Answer: C. Searching exclusively by the journal's unique ISSN.
Explanation: The International Standard Serial Number (ISSN) is an unambiguous identifier unique to each specific publication format.
If a journal's performance improved from Q3 in 2023 to Q2 in 2024, what does this tell a researcher analyzing historical data on Scopus?
A. The database retroactively deleted older citations to skew past values.
B. The journal changed its entire subject classification category completely.
C. The publication changed from an open-access model to a paid paywall system.
D. The journal's citation performance relative to its subject field peer group has increased.
Answer: D. The journal's citation performance relative to its subject field peer group has increased.
Explanation: Quartiles are relative distributions; moving up indicates the journal outpaced a larger segment of its field peer group.
Which mathematical factor is treated differently when calculating Scopus CiteScore versus SCImago Journal Rank (SJR)?
A. CiteScore completely ignores publication volume, while SJR ignores citations.
B. CiteScore weighs all incoming citations equally, while SJR weighs them by the prestige of the citing source.
C. CiteScore uses a 10-year window, while SJR uses a 1-year window.
D. SJR only counts citations written in English, while CiteScore counts all languages.
Answer: B. CiteScore weighs all incoming citations equally, while SJR weighs them by the prestige of the citing source.
Explanation: SJR utilizes a network prestige algorithm where citations from highly cited sources carry more mathematical weight than lesser-known sources.
When presenting bibliometric options to colleagues, why is it risky to declare a journal 'objectively superior' based solely on its CiteScore quartile?
A. Scopus metrics are only recognized in a small number of countries.
B. Quartiles are randomized every month to ensure fairness.
C. CiteScore is a subjective metric that changes based on user reviews.
D. Different ranking bodies utilize different algorithmic formulas that reflect distinct aspects of journal impact.
Answer: D. Different ranking bodies utilize different algorithmic formulas that reflect distinct aspects of journal impact.
Explanation: Because a journal can occupy different quartiles across metrics like CiteScore, SJR, or JIF, an 'objective' ranking depends on the specific framework used.