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i10index

The i10-index is a simple bibliometric metric used by Google Scholar to indicate a researcher’s publishing impact. It represents the number of an author’s publications that have received at least ten citations in Google Scholar’s index.

Calculation and interpretation: For a given author, Google Scholar tallies all publications listed in the author’s

Usage and limitations: The i10-index is easy to understand and communicate, making it a popular quick indicator

Relation to other metrics: Compared with the h-index, the i10-index provides a simpler, count-based measure that

profile
and
counts
how
many
have
accumulated
ten
or
more
citations.
The
resulting
number,
the
i10-index,
increases
whenever
a
publication’s
citation
count
reaches
or
surpasses
ten.
It
is
often
displayed
alongside
the
author’s
h-index
on
Google
Scholar
profiles,
providing
a
quick
summary
of
easily
cited
work.
of
scholarly
productivity
with
a
minimum
level
of
cited
recognition.
However,
it
has
notable
limitations.
It
is
field-dependent,
favoring
disciplines
with
larger
citation
cultures
and
longer
publication
histories.
It
does
not
account
for
the
magnitude
of
citation
counts
beyond
the
threshold
(a
paper
with
10
citations
is
treated
the
same
as
one
with
hundreds).
It
may
be
affected
by
name
variants,
author
disambiguation
issues,
and
the
completeness
of
Google
Scholar’s
indexing.
It
also
does
not
normalize
for
co-authorship
or
career
length,
and
it
can
be
influenced
by
self-citations
and
database
coverage.
emphasizes
the
breadth
of
consistently
cited
work
rather
than
the
balance
of
quantity
and
impact.
It
should
be
used
alongside
other
indicators
(such
as
h-index,
total
citations,
and
field-appropriate
metrics)
for
a
fuller
assessment
of
scholarly
influence.