Tuesday, February 11, 2025

On assessing the impact of academic research: A concise explanation of the Field Weighted Citation Impact (FWCI)

(the table at the end lists the top 50 most impactful academics of the International Association of Maritime Ecnomists (IAME). The organization was founded in 1992 to promote education and research in the wider area of "shipping and port management").
 
 In an era of intense and rapidly increasing production of applied research, assessing the quality and impact of research is more important than ever. To this end, the scientific community and the publishing world have developed various metrics to measure and evaluate the impact of research output, particularly with respect to how the impact of a researcher's work compares to that of his peers. In most countries with advanced higher education systems, such metrics are used to fund universities and research programs, and to recruit or promote academic staff. More importantly, the industry (e.g., ports) uses these indicators as a way to ensure credibility and confidence in business decisions based on such research.

One such indicator is the FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact) of Elsevier, the world's largest publishing organization. The index is included in the Scopus database (also from Elsevier) which lists millions of scientific publications in peer-reviewed journals. Today, the FWCI is used (together with other metrics) by the world's top universities such as MIT, Stanford, Imperial College London, University College London, National University of Singapore, Nanyang Technological University, Erasmus University Rotterdam, and many more.

The FWCI comes to correct the shortcomings of both the Impact Factor (IF) and Google Scholar (GS). The former (IF) is more suitable for measuring the impact of scientific journals, while the latter (GS) counts all kinds of publications (no peer review, student theses, newspaper articles and so on). Unlike the IF, which is compiled only by Scopus and is thus unalterable, the GS is subject to "intervention" by the authors themselves and is thus mutable (examples of such interference abound). Thus, a popular criterion for evaluating research impact is the FWCI.

The big advantage of the FWCI is not only that it is based on reputable, peer-reviewed, publications in the Scopus database, but it is more fair, since it compares research impacts in the same discipline. This is because it does not make sense to compare (as IF or GS do through their unweighted impact factors) the research impact of a medical doctor –a  field with thousands of researchers, publications and citations- with that of a maritime economist, historian or philosopher, belonging to research domains with only a few hundred researchers around the world. In other words, the research impact of, say, a maritime researcher is compared to the impact of her colleagues, but not to doctors, lawyers or engineers. Here is a real-life example: According to IF, a medical doctor with 30 thousand citations and IF=100, who might be nominated for the Nobel Prize in medicine, has an FWCI=2.5; i.e. what one would expect from the average economist. 

In conclusion, both IF and GS are inappropriate (on their own) for evaluating research impact, simply because one can be a prolific author, but what counts really is the importance and impact of her research, as compared to that of peers in the field and not to doctors, astrophysicists, our students in their dissertations, or the general reading public who are easily impressed by works designed to impress (a professor at a famous American university became world famous when he wrote that trade agreements (NAFTA, ASEAN, etc.) are bad for trade!). 

The weighted FWCI therefore compares the number of citations a publication receives with the average number of citations received by articles of the same discipline. This weighting ensures that the comparison is fair, regardless of whether the article comes from a field with a high or low citation rate. 

Thus, FWCI values greater than 1 indicate that the work of a particular researcher has a higher impact than that of his field in general, and the researcher is outperforming.  The opposite is true for index values below 1. For example, FWCI = 0.9 means that the researcher may by prolific (easy to publish these days in view of the deluge of journals fishing for submissions), she may have authored countless publications, but her impact, comparatively, in the scientific domain the researcher has set out to cover, is rather limited and below average.

Usually, universities like the above that use the FWCI do not ignore other criteria such as IF, number of citations, student evaluations, community service, acquisition of contract research, etc., for a more holistic picture of the assessment. These criteria change from university to university and country to country, especially in countries where research takes a back seat to things like recognisability, publicity, media, and so on.

Scopus publishes another metric, ie. citations per paper, which is equally important. I will revert on this soon. 

HE Haralambides
Feb 11, 2025

 

Τhe top 50 most impactful academics of the International Association of Maritime Economists (IAME: https://www.iame.ac/) according to the Scopus Field Weighted Citation Impact (FWCI: https://www.scopus.com/).

Surname

Name

FWCI Score

University

1

Haralambides

Hercules

4.31

Erasmus University Rotterdam

2

Cullinane

Kevin

3.7

University of Gothenburg

3

Rodrigue

Jean-Paul

3.24

Texas A&M University - Galveston

4

Munim

Ziaul

3.15

University of South-Eastern Norway

5

Pallis

Athanasios

3.09

University of Piraeus

6

Lee

Paul Tae-Woo

3.07

Zhejiang University

7

Chen

Jihong

2.74

Shenzhen University

8

Yuen

Kum Fai

2.73

Nanyang Technological University

9

Psaraftis

Harilaos

2.60

Technical University of Denmark

10

Yang

Zaili

2.46

Liverpool John Moores University

11

Notteboom

Theo

2.38

University of Antwerp

12

Lam

Jasmine

2.27

Technical University of Denmark

13

De Langen

Peter

2.24

Copenhagen Business School

14

Syriopoulos

Theodore

2.17

University of Athens

15

Beresford

Anthony

2.14

Cardiff University

16

Acciaro

Michele

2.04

Copenhagen Business School

17

Tavasszy

Lori

1.84

Delft University of Technology

18

Monios

Jason

I.76

KEDGE Business School

19

Wilmsmeier

Gordon

1.75

Kühne Logistics University

20

Haezendonck

Elvira

1.70

University of Brussels

21

Parola

Francesco

1.69

Universitas Mercatorum

22

Song

Dong-Wook

1.69

World Maritime University

23

Lun

Venus

1.65

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

24

Cariou

Pierre

1.64

KEDGE Business School

25

Dekker

Rommert

1.63

Erasmus University Rotterdam

26

Dooms

Michael

1.63

University of Brussels

27

Yang

Dong

1.50

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

28

Drobetz

Wolfgang

1.58

University of Hamburg

29

Ng

Adolf K.Y.

1.43

United International College

30

Kavussanos

Manolis

1.43

Athens University of Economics and Business

31

Tovar de la Fe

Beatrice

1.43

University of Las Palmas 

32

Lyridis

Dimitrios

1.39

National Technical University of Athens

33

Ferrari

Claudio

1.37

University of Genova

34

Lekakou

Maria

1.35

University of the Aegean

35

Satta

Giovanni

1.31

University of Genoa

36

Strandenes

Siri P.

1.3

Norwegian School of Economics

37

Pantouvakis

Angelos

1.3

University of Piraeus

38

Schinas

Orestis

1.29

University of the Aegean

39

Theofanis

Sotirios

1.28

University of York Europe Campus

40

Yip

Tsz Leung

1.28

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

41

Shibasaki

Ryuichi

1.25

University of Tokyo

42

Nomikos

Nikos

1.16

Bayes Business School

43

Tzannatos

Ernestos

1.09

University of Piraeus

44

Vanelslander

Thierry

1.08

University of Antwerp

45

Talley

Wayne K. 

1.07

Old Dominion University

46

Fagerholt

Kjetil

1.06

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

47

Brooks

Mary

1.05

Dalhousie University

48

Adland

Roar

1.02

Norwegian School of Economics

49

Musso

Enrico

1.02

University of Genova

50

Boile

Maria

1.01

University of Piraeus

 


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