CWTS Leiden Ranking 2016

CWTS Leiden Ranking 2016

Author: ChemistryViews.org

The annual CWTS Leiden University Ranking for 2016 has been published by the Centre for Science and Technology Studies, Leiden University, The Netherlands. The Leiden Ranking is based exclusively on bibliographic data from the Web of Science database by Thomson Reuters. The ranking provides both a size-dependent rating, which is based on the absolute number of top-cited publications, and a size-independent list, where the performance of a university is measured relative to its publication output.

This year, US institutions continue to dominate the top 20. The highest ranked universities overall are Harvard University, Stanford University, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). The ranking also offers size-independent values, where new York’s Rockefeller University occupies the top spot, followed by MIT and Harvard.

In the physical sciences, which include chemistry and related disciplines, the top spot in the size-dependent rating is occupied by MIT. In the size-independent ranking, Kent State University, Ohio, USA, is ranked at number one.

Size-Dependent Ranking (All Sciences)

(by the number of the university’s publications belonging to the top 1 % most frequently cited)

 

Size-Dependent Ranking (All Sciences)

 

Size-Independent Ranking (All Sciences)

(by proportion of the university’s publications belonging to the top 1 % most frequently cited)

 

Size-Independent Ranking (All Sciences)

 

Size-Dependent Ranking (Physical Sciences and Engineering)

(by the number of the university’s publications belonging to the top 1 % most frequently cited)

 

Size-Dependent Ranking (Physical Sciences and Engineering)

 

Size-Independent Ranking (Physical Sciences and Engineering)

(by proportion of the university’s publications belonging to the top 1 % most frequently cited)

 

Size-Independent Ranking (Physical Sciences and Engineering)

 

Methodology

The Leiden Ranking is based exclusively on bibliographic data covering the years 2011–2014 from the Web of Science database produced by Thomson Reuters. Book publications, publications in conference proceedings, and publications in journals not indexed in Web of Science are not included.

The ranking offers the following indicators of the scientific impact of a university:

  • P(top 1 %) and PP(top 1 %)
    The number and the proportion of a university’s publications that, compared with other publications in the same field and in the same year, belong to the top 1% most frequently cited.
  • P(top 10 %) and PP(top 10 %)
    The number and the proportion of a university’s publications that, compared with other publications in the same field and in the same year, belong to the top 10% most frequently cited.
  • P(top 50 %) and PP(top 50 %)
    The number and the proportion of a university’s publications that, compared with other publications in the same field and in the same year, belong to the top 50% most frequently cited.
  • TCS and MCS
    The total and the average number of citations of the publications of a university.
  • TNCS and MNCS
    The total and the average number of citations of the publications of a university, normalized for field and publication year. An MNCS value of two for instance means that the publications of a university have been cited twice above the average of their field and publication year.

The ranking provides statistics for the following five main fields of science:

  • Biomedical and health sciences
  • Life and earth sciences
  • Mathematics and computer science
  • Physical sciences and engineering
  • Social sciences and humanities

 

Also of Interest

 

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