![]() ![]() ![]() (Yes, people cite more often than they read :-).)ģ.93 x 0.59 = 2.31 readers per article of this journal per year. There are journals with even higher cites ( Mathematical Programming, Series B is 4.20 per document), but let’s consider this JAMS as the world’s most prestigious math journal (as it’s much above, for example, more famous than Mathematische Annalen in this list).ĭoes it make sense to publish in this journal? Yes, even in this world’s highest impact math journal, not speaking about weaker journals?Ĭonsider further statistics: Accordingly, this graph published at, readers, has just 0.59 of citations. It has 3.93 cites per document (is it cites for two years or one year measured during two years? Unsure). The Statistics or Why We Don’t Need Scientific Journals AnymoreĪccording to this list,, the world’s highest impact factor math journal (more precisely, most top “SJR” metrics) is the Journal of the American Mathematical Society (JAMS). My books contain complex formulas, and yet I succeeded after much trying to find a way to publish them both as a paperback and as e-books, yes, with formulas. ![]() Scientific publishing is possible at Amazon! In recent days I published three scientific books on Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing Program. ![]()
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