Redner index
The Redner index (Redner 2010) is just the square-root of the total citation count for all publications, similar to the j-index (Levene), which is the sum of the square-root of the counts.
$$R=\sqrt{C^P}=\sqrt{\sum\limits_{i=1}^{P}{C_i}}$$History
Year | R |
---|---|
1997 | 1.4142 |
1998 | 3.8730 |
1999 | 6.6332 |
2000 | 9.1652 |
2001 | 12.0416 |
2002 | 16.0000 |
2003 | 20.0000 |
2004 | 25.2784 |
2005 | 30.6757 |
2006 | 36.7831 |
2007 | 42.3674 |
2008 | 47.4868 |
2009 | 52.4404 |
2010 | 57.9310 |
2011 | 63.7338 |
2012 | 69.0072 |
2013 | 74.3371 |
2014 | 78.9557 |
2015 | 83.4206 |
2016 | 87.6641 |
2017 | 91.3072 |
2018 | 94.9421 |
2019 | 98.3768 |
2020 | 101.7448 |
2021 | 105.3091 |
2022 | 108.6692 |
2023 | 111.5213 |
2024 | 114.2672 |
References
- Redner, S. (2010) On the meaning of the h-index. Journal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment 2010(3):L03005.