
Applied Mathematical Sciences is indexed and abstracted by Scopus. The bibliometric indicators of Applied Mathematical Sciences have been computed by Scopus/SCImago and Journal Metrics as follows:
Cites per Doc: 0, 586.
SNIP (Source Normalized Impact per Paper): 0, 853
IPP (Impact per Publication): 0, 507
SJR (SCImago Journal Rank): 0, 335
H index: 21
Full-text Archives:
      Portico (USA)
Indexing and abstracting by:
      Scopus (The Netherlands)
      CrossRef (USA)
      Google Scholar (USA)
      ROAD Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources (EU)
      EBSCO (USA)
      Academic Search Complete (USA)
      Ulrich's Periodicals Directory (USA)
      Serials Solutions (USA)
      MathGuide (Germany), etc.
CITATIONS AND IMPACT INDEXING |
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Cites per Doc |
Cites per Doc is a measure reflecting the average number of citations received per paper published in the journal during the two preceding years, namely,
      A = the number of times articles published in the preceding two years which were cited by all journals during the current year.       B = the total number of papers published by the journal in the preceding two years.       Cites per Doc = A/B. Cites per Doc is computed by Scopus by the same formula as journal impact factor of ISI-Thomson Reuters. |
SNIP (Source Normalized Impact per Paper) |
Created by Professor Henk Moed at CTWS, University of Leiden, Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP) measures contextual citation impact by weighting citations based on the total number of citations in a subject field. |
IPP (Impact per Publication) |
The Impact per Publication measures the ratio of citations in a year (Y) to papers published in the three previous years (Y1, Y2, Y3) divided by the number of papers published in those same years (Y1, Y2, Y3). |
SCImago journal rank indicator |
SCImago journal rank indicator is developed by Scopus and expresses the average number of weighted citations received in the selected year by the papers published in the selected journal in the three previous years. |
H index |
The H index expresses the journal's number of articles (h) that have received at least h citations. It quantifies both scientific productivity and scientific impact of a journal and it is also applicable to scientists, countries, etc. |