Applicants from the College of Medicine and its affiliated hospitals can download the Personal Application Form, fill it out, and then either scan and send it electronically or submit a paper copy to the counter at the Medical Library.
A set of papers is sorted by the number of citations they receive. When the rank and the number of citations are equivalent, that number is taken as the H-index. For example, an H-index of 49 means "there are 49 papers that have been cited at least 49 times each.”
Field-Weighted Citation Impact (FWCI): This index is a normalized indicator that is calculated by dividing the number of citations received by a set of articles (or a single article) by the average number of citations received by other articles published in the same year, within the same field, and of the same document type.
(Citations are counted only for the publication year and the following three years.)
FWCI Value = 1: Performance is equal to the global average. FWCI Value > 1: Performance is above the global average. FWCI Value < 1: Performance is below the global average.
For example, an FWCI of 1.39 indicates that the citation impact is 39% higher than the global average.
Category Normalized Citation Impact (CNCI): This metric is a normalized indicator calculated by dividing the number of citations a set of articles (or a single article) receives by the average number of citations received by other articles published in the same year, in the same field, and of the same document type.
CNCI Value = 1: Performance is equal to the global average. CNCI Value > 1: Performance is above the global average. CNCI Value < 1: Performance is below the global average.
For example, a CNCI of 1.39 indicates that the citation impact is 39% higher than the global average.