International Journal of Human Computer Studies
SCImago
Q1
WOS
Q1
Impact factor
5.3
SJR
1.435
CiteScore
11.5
Categories
Education
Engineering (miscellaneous)
Hardware and Architecture
Human Factors and Ergonomics
Human-Computer Interaction
Software
Areas
Computer Science
Engineering
Social Sciences
Years of issue
1994-2025
journal names
International Journal of Human Computer Studies
INT J HUM-COMPUT ST
Top-3 citing journals

Lecture Notes in Computer Science
(6321 citations)

International Journal of Human Computer Studies
(2932 citations)

Computers in Human Behavior
(1918 citations)
Top-3 organizations

Stanford University
(42 publications)

University of Nottingham
(39 publications)

University College London
(36 publications)

University College London
(10 publications)

University of Melbourne
(10 publications)

Tampere University
(8 publications)
Top-3 countries
Most cited in 5 years
Found
Publications found: 441

The Role of Contrast-Enhanced Imaging Methods in Breast Cancer Early Diagnostics and Treatment Planning
Journal of radiology and nuclear medicine (Vestnik rentgenologii i radiologii)
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 0
,
Tyurin I.Е., Rozhkova N.I., Artamonova E.V., Busko E.A., Didenko V.V., Zikiryakhodzhaev A.D., Karpova M.S., Kvetenadze G.Е., Krivorot’ko P.V., Mazo M.L., Petrovsky A.V., Puchkova О.S., Serebryakova S.V., Bakulev А.P.

Open Access
|
Abstract
Оn March 27, 2023, а multidisciplinary Advisory Board meeting was held in Moscow with the participation of Е.V. Artamonova, Е.А. Busko, V.V. Didenko, А.D. Zikiryakhodzhaev, М.S. Karpova, G.Е. Kvetenadze, P.V. Krivorot’ko, М.L. Mazo, А.V. Petrovsky, О.S. Puchkova, S.V. Serebryakova under the chairmanship of I.Е. Tyurin and N.I. Rozhkova. The participants discussed different issues of early diagnostics and treatment planning of breast cancer. We present the conclusion made by the Advisory Board.
Q4
The dynamics of biomarkers of autophagy and neuroinflammation in the acute period of atherothrombotic ischemic stroke
Lugovaya A.V., Kalinina N.M., Ivanov A.M., Nikitin Y.V., Sukhina I.A., Mitreikin V.P., Zabirov S.S., Kirilkin G.E.
Postischemic neuroinflammation is a critical pathophysiological process within the entire pattern of cerebral ischemia. It is characterized by microglial and astroglial activation and is accompanied by disturbances in the innate and adaptive immune response. The early damage of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) integrity is accompanied by the brain autoantigens release into circulation, in particular, the neurospecific protein S100B. According to recent experimental data, activated autophagy is associated with postischemic neuroinflammation, involved in its regulation and influences the outcome of the ischemic stroke (IS) acute period. Experimental evidence is provided for the autophagy involvement in the regulation of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines production. The influence of activated autophagy on the pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines balance in acute IS has been demonstrated. Purpose of the study: to quantitatively evaluate key autophagy biomarkers, the early biomarker of BBB damage S100B, pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines in the dynamics of the IS acute period. To identify the relationship between autophagy and inflammation biomarkers, 112 patients with acute IS and 56 healthy persons were examined. Patients underwent dynamic clinical neurological examination and blood testing on the 1st, 7th and 14th days from the disease’s onset. The level of autophagy in peripheral blood leukocytes was determined by flow cytometry by assessing the intracellular expression of autophagy proteins LC3, p62 and mean fluorescence intensity of the Cyto-ID dye, which specifically recognizes active autophagosomes. Serum concentrations of TNFα, IL-1β, IL-4, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, IL-18, neuropeptide S100B and autophagy biomarkers Beclin-1, LC3, p62 were determined by ELISA. A statistically significant increase in the studied biomarkers was found compared to the control group. The maximum increase in inflammation indicators and neuropeptide S100B was observed on the 1st, and autophagy biomarkers – on the 7th day of the disease. Established correlations indicate the participation of activated autophagy in the postischemic neuroinflammation regulation and its involvement in ischemic brain damage in the early stages of the IS acute period (days 1-7).
Q4

Multifocal character of lesions in gunshot open globe injury type B in experiment
Kol'bin A.A., Kulikov A.N., Zybina N.N., Frolova M.Y., Troyanovsky R.L., Chirskiy V.S.
BACKGROUND: An increase was noted in the number of gunshot eyeball injuries, which are accompanied by low functional outcomes. Reproduction and experimental study of this type of eye injury would help improving the functional and cosmetic treatment results in patients.
AIM: The aim of the study is to investigate gunshot open globe injury type B (penetrating wound without intraocular foreign body) on a standardized experimental model.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: A complete investigation of the standardized model of gunshot open globe injury type B (penetrating wound without intraocular foreign body) simulated on the ballistic test facility was carried out. The experiment was accomplished at the ophthalmology chair on 36 rabbits (71 eyes). The injury was inflicted in the projection of the ciliary body — zone II (Birmingham Eye Trauma Terminology). The examination in the control period included ophthalmologic (ophthalmoscopy, full field electroretinography, optical coherence tomography), biochemical (testing of vitreous fibronectin level), histological and radiological (magnetic resonance imaging, ultrasound examination) methods. Statistical non-parametric methods of data analysis were used.
RESULTS: The analysis of gunshot open globe injury type B model demonstrated the rate and multiple foci of abnormalities practically of all eyeball structures.
CONCLUSIONS: For the first time ever, the characteristics of gunshot open globe injury type B model were studied using a new complex of methods, their high reproducibility (91.5–100%) was demonstrated. Based on recorded abnormalities in all ocular structures, including proliferative vitreoretinopathy, the multifocal character of damage in this type of injury is validated.
Q1

Conservative Treatment in Avascular Necrosis of the Femoral Head: A Systematic Review
Goncharov E.N., Koval O.A., Nikolaevich Bezuglov E., Aleksandrovich Vetoshkin A., Gavriilovich Goncharov N., Encarnación Ramirez M.D., Montemurro N.
Introduction: Avascular necrosis (AVN) of the femoral head is a pressing orthopedic issue, leading to bone tissue death due to disrupted blood supply and affecting the quality of life of individuals significantly. This review focuses on conservative treatments, evaluating their efficacy as mainstay therapies. Enhanced understanding of AVN’s pathophysiology and advancements in diagnostic tools have rekindled interest in non-surgical interventions, emphasizing personalized, multidisciplinary approaches for improved outcomes. Material and Method: A systematic search was conducted on PubMed, SCOPUS, and Google Scholar databases from January 2020 to August 2023, with the objective of focusing on conservative treatments for AVN of the femoral head. Eligible studies, including original research, case reports, and observational studies, were examined for relevant, well-documented patient outcomes post-conservative treatments, excluding non-English and surgically focused articles without comparative conservative data. Results: A systematic search yielded 376 records on AVN of the femoral head across multiple databases. After de-duplication and rigorous screening for relevance and quality, 11 full-text articles were ultimately included for a comprehensive qualitative synthesis, focusing on conservatively managing the condition. Conclusions: This review evaluates the effectiveness of conservative treatments such as pharmacological interventions and physical modalities in managing AVN of the femoral head. Despite promising results in symptom alleviation and disease progression delay, variability in outcomes and methodological limitations in studies necessitate further rigorous, randomized controlled trials for a robust, patient-centric approach to optimize therapeutic outcomes in AVN management.
Q3

Assessment of the levels of formation and leading components of the patient safety system of the anesthesiology and resuscitation service (message 2)
Gorban V.I.
Q3
Messenger of Anesthesiology and Resuscitation (Vestnik anesteziologii i reanimatologii)
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 1
,

Open Access
|
Abstract
The objective was to assess the levels of formation and leading components of the patient safety system of the anesthesiology and resuscitation (A&R) service (department) of multidisciplinary hospitals.Materials and methods. Expert assessment of the patient safety system of the anesthesiology and resuscitation service (department) of 235 multidisciplinary hospitals, including the assessment of its level, leading components, and their structure in the overall sample. Expert assessment method. Statistical analysis of data distribution, Student’s t-test for independent samples of different sizes, correlation analysis.Results. It has been established that in the main part (38.3%) of multidisciplinary hospitals, the A&R service is at an average (sufficient) level of ensuring patient safety. 17% are at a high (organized) and highest (system-organized) level in terms of ensuring patient safety. A fairly large part (44.7%) is at a low (insufficient) and minimal (critical, extremely low) level of ensuring patient safety. At the same time, the level of ensuring patient safety in the A&R service of multidisciplinary hospitals is important and has a close but inverse relationship with the level of digitalization. Comparison of the severity of the five leading (main) components (criteria) for ensuring patient safety in the A&R service of multidisciplinary hospitals made it possible to assess the levels of their completeness and their structure and showed that in the general sample, the most pronounced criteria for ensuring patient safety were «Teamwork, staff expertise» and «Availability of medicines».Conclusion. The current state of the patient safety system of the A&R service of multidisciplinary hospitals is characterized by 5 levels and 5 leading (main) components, the expert assessment of which made it possible to distribute the A&R services of hospitals according to the indicated levels, identify the structure of their leading components an determine target areas for improving the patient safety system.
Q3

Somatometric parameters in firefighters of the Federal Fire Fighting Service of the EMERCOM of Russia
Sannikov M.V., Kalyuzhnaya A.P., Makarova N.V.
Q3
Medico-Biological and Socio-Psychological Problems of Safety in Emergency Situations
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 0
,

Open Access
|
Abstract
Relevance. Professional firefighters are subjected to high levels of chronic stress due to extreme professional activities. Chronic stress is a psychogenic factor, conducive of obesity, the latter being a predictor of cardiovascular and other diseases. To identify those at a higher risk, the body fat percentage was estimated in the Russian EMERCOM Federal Fire Fighting Service firefighters.The objective is to estimate the body fat percentage in firefighters of the Russian EMERCOM using anthropometric and circumference calculations with further comparative analysis.Methods. Body mass index (BMI) based anthropometric and circumference calculations, including waist circumference, waist/hip ratio, and body type, allowed assess the body fat percentage (BFP) in 98 EMERCOM firefighters working in three fire and rescue units in St. Petersburg. In addition, a retrospective study was performed to analyze 1497 medical examination records of the EMERCOM firefighters involved in fire extinguishing operations in 2019-2023. BFP was relied on circumference calculation used in the U.S. Armed Forces, the U.S. Navy, and the Young Men’s Christian Organization. The somatometric parameters were analyzed using Statistica 13.3 software and statistical methods – dispersion, correlation, stepwise regression, and conjugation table, with the significance level p < 0.05.Results and analysis. The study found that BMI only as a tool to assess the body fat percentage in firefighters is insufficient and does not allow to obtain a reliable result. The reason is that BMI is a highly reliable indicator of excessive body fat only in obese population, whereas in normal-weight or overweight subjects the BMI data is often misleading. In this respect, BFPbased circumference calculation appears to be the most reliable tool to assess body fat content. The study also includes an extensive comparative analysis of the obtained results, suggesting a diagnostic strategy to identify obesity-prone firefighters among the Russian EMERCOM firefighter corps at regular medical examinations. In addition, the suggested new BMI formulas involve simpler arithmetic calculations.Conclusion. The study results, show that excessive body weight is hardly a rare event among professional firefighters of the EMERCOM of Russia. Further studies regarding its correlation with chronic non-infectious diseases are required to develop new healthcare solutions and obesity prevention programs.
Q3

Cluster analysis and visualization of keywords in papers by international researchers on bioactive drugs in the treatment of rotator cuff injuries
Vasil’chenko N.V., Vetoshkin A.A., Gusev S.S.
Q3
Medico-Biological and Socio-Psychological Problems of Safety in Emergency Situations
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 0
,

Open Access
|
Abstract
Relevance. Rotator cuff ruptures continue to show high incidence with no signs of decrease. Despite the available expertise in advanced diagnosis and surgical treatment, supported by extensive scientific evidence, achieving optimal clinical outcomes remains a challenge. As a result, researchers and clinicians have been exploring alternative methods to improve outcomes. Recent studies in orthopedics have demonstrated that using bioactive drugs (biologic augmentation), particularly multipotent stem cells, may positively influence tissue regeneration. Therefore, biologic augmentation may be a promising strategy for promoting tissue healing.The objective of this study is to perform a cluster analysis and visualization of keywords in papers by international researchers on innovative rotator cuff injury treatments, including bioactive drug therapy.Methods. This study investigated publications dated 2013 to 2022 and published in the PubMed international reference and bibliographic database, using terminology-based search queries, i.e. (concentrated bone marrow aspirate OR stem cells OR platelet) and (rotator cuff injury). The search yielded 484 relevant scientific papers. Relevant bibliographic information was uploaded in “.txt” format into the VOSviewer 1.6.20 analytical software.Results and analysis. . With the coefficient of determination (R2 = 0.94), the polynomial trend of article dynamics showed an increase in the number of publications. The average annual number of articles was 46. With 3 repetitions, 207 keywords were analyzed and combined subsequently into 7 clusters. Cluster 1 was called ‘Arthroscopy treatment results of rotator cuff injuries’. It contained 21.1 % of papers with the total link strength of keywords 22.5 %. Cluster 2 ‘Use of platelet-rich plasma in injuries and diseases of the rotator cuff’ contained 24.2 % of papers with the total link strength 21.2 %. Cluster 3 ‘Biological models’ yielded 18.6 % and 20.0 % respectively. Cluster 4 ‘Regenerative potential of mesenchymal stem cells – 15.2 % and 15.4 % respectively; Cluster 5 ‘Using mesenchymal stem cells in rotator cuff injury treatment’ – 11.7 % and 11.2 % respectively; Cluster 6 ‘Efficiency of mesenchymal stem cells on the treatment of rotator cuff injuries’ – 8.6 % and 8.6 % respectively; Cluster 7 ‘Using of bioactive drugs in orthopaedics / orthobiology’ – 1.4 % and 1.1 % respectively. Leading authors and research schools were identified as well.Conclusion. The results provided an insight into the areas of research over the past 10 years and hence have provided information support for scientists and practitioners exploring innovative treatments for rotator cuff injuries, including the use of bioactive drugs.
Q3

Analysis and optimization of global terrorism index indicators
Evdokimov V.I., Chernov K.A.
Q3
Medico-Biological and Socio-Psychological Problems of Safety in Emergency Situations
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 0
,

Open Access
|
Abstract
Relevance. Terrorism has a significantly disrupts life of the population across regions (countries). In recent years, armed conflicts have increased in number, and global terrorist activity has intensified.The objective is to analyze the Global Terrorism Index (GTI) reported across countries from 2010 to 2022 and suggest GTI optimization techniques based on risk metrics and risk indicators.Methods. The GTI is a comprehensive method to study the impact of terrorism in 163 countries, comprising 99.7 % of the world’s population. Data was obtained from annual 2011 to 2023 GTI reports, published by the Institute for Economics & Peace and its founder Steve Killelea, a technology entrepreneur. Quasi-logarithmic structures were used to normalize the baseline data to a 10-point GTI scale (where 10 is the maximum score). The risk of death (injury) among the world’s population was calculated based on the Global Terrorism Database indicators for terrorism biomedical consequences registered from 2011 to 2020. Risks were calculated per 1 million people (10–6). Among the world’s population, the individual risk of death from a terrorist attack was 2.55 • 10–6 deaths/(person • year), while the injury risk was 3.63 • 10–6 injuries/(person • year). Qualitative risk indicators were also calculated as optimal, acceptable, and elevated.Results and analysis. From 2010 to 2022, the annual average GTI indicator showed that 4 countries had a very high terrorism level (average index in Iraq – 9.32, Afghanistan – 9.03, Pakistan – 8.42, Nigeria – 8.11); 8 countries were classified as high risk, 30 countries – as average risk (including Russia – 5.57), 25 countries – as low risk, 84 countries – as very low risk, and 12 countries – as zero cases of terrorism. The GTI correlated well with the number of deaths as a most crucial indicator. At the same time, countries with a large population showed inconsistencies between GTI and terrorism risk indicators. For example, according to 2011–2020 data, China’s GTI level (5.09) was classified as average level of terrorism, with the risk of dying 0.11 • 10–6 deaths/(person • year) and the risk of injury 0.56 • 10–6 injuries/(person • year), which was 15.5 and 4.3 times below the optimal global risk, respectively. Notably, Afghanistan’s GTI level (9.15) was classified as very high risk, with the death risk 93.53 • 10–6 deaths/(person • year) and injury risk 128.49 • 10–6 injuries/(person •year), which was 27.5 and 26.6 times above the elevated global risk, respectively.Conclusion. Although apparently impossible to eradicate completely across the world, terrorism can be drawn to a minimum. The Global Terrorism Index reveals potential threats and allows to compare terrorist activity across individual territories (countries) in order to undertake the necessary political or organizational counter-terrorism measures. Following large-scale studies, risks of death and injury should be incorporated in the Global Terrorism Index enhance unbiased terrorism threat assessment for individual countries (territories).
Q3

Analysis of morbidity indicators in the personnel of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Ivanov N.M., Ichitovkina E.G., Evdokimov V.I., Liholetov A.G.
Q3
Medico-Biological and Socio-Psychological Problems of Safety in Emergency Situations
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 1
,

Open Access
|
Abstract
Introduction. The extreme work conditions of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs personnel strain the functional reserves of body systems accelerate the emergence of occupational diseases and even death. By ensuring safety of the population and social stability in general, combat readiness largely depends on strong health of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs workforce.Methods. The object of the study was the database of morbidity rates among employees with special ranks of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs from 2008 to 2023. Morbidity rates were correlated with chapters of diseases and causes of death according to the ICD 10th Revision (ICD-10). Average long-term data on morbidity and labor losses were calculated per 1000 (‰) employees, primary disability – per 10 thousand (10–4 ), mortality – per 100 thousand (10–5) employees. The tables present the structure, ranks and disease development dynamics. To calculate the social and epidemiological significance of morbidity, indicators of fatality-associated disease categories were assigned the coefficient 3, primary disability – 2, primary morbidity – 1.5, other types of morbidity and workforce loss – 1. To compare the obtained statistics with morbidity rates in extreme professions, considering the due course of disease development and impossibility to yield absolute data for the latter, the study calculated the arithmetic mean data and errors (M ± m) or medians and quartiles, if different from normal (Me [Q1 ; Q3]). The dynamics of indicators was assessed using time series analysis and calculation of a second-order polynomial trend.Results and analysis. The long-term average rate of general morbidity was 857.1 ‰ (868.5 ± 35.7 ‰), primary morbid- ity – 545.7 ‰ (553.6 ± 27.5 ‰), outpatient follow-up – 123.8 ‰ (125.9 ± 7.5 ‰), loss of workforce – 572.4 (576.1 ± 28.5 ‰), days out of work – 7398 ‰ (7506 ± 391 ‰), primary disability – 10.9 • 10–4 (11.1 ± 1.3 •10–4), mortality – 90.1 • 10–5 (92.4 ± 9.9 • 10–5). With high coefficients of determination, polynomial trends in overall morbidity, primary disability and mortality show a decrease in data, primary morbidity, loss of workforce and days out of work resemble a U-curve, showing an increase in indicators due to COVID-19-associated morbidity cases in 2020–2022. The indicators for injuries, poisoning and some other consequences of externally caused disorders (Chapter XIX) represented the main chapters of diseases that – with a share of 24.6% – were the key contributors to the social and epidemiological significance of morbidity among the personnel of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia, followed by respiratory diseases (Chapter X) – 20.3 % , circulatory system disorders (Chapter IX) – 18.7 %, neoplasms (Chapter II) – 6.8 %, musculoskeletal system and connective tissue diseases (Chapter XIII) – 6.5 %, digestive disorders (Chapter XI). In total, these сhapters of diseases accounted for 82.3 % of the entire social and epidemiological significance of morbidity.Conclusion. Studies have shown lower incidence rates than in the Russian population of working age. Timely detection, treatment, rehabilitation and prevention of diseases contained in the ICD main chapters can significantly improve the health status of personnel of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs.
Q3
Digitalization of anesthesiology and resuscitation services: multicenter questionnaire study
Gorban V.I., Shchegolev A.V., Protsenko D.N., Gritsan A.I., Grigoryev E.V., Dunts P.V., Levit A.L., Zabolotskikh I.B.
OBJECTIVE: To substantiate recommendations for the implementation of the concept and technologies of digitalization of the anesthesiology and resuscitation (A&R) service in multidisciplinary hospitals to solve the problem of ensuring the safety of patients and medical personnel. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study presents data on the implementation of information technology in the practice of the A&R service based on information received from 235 anesthesiology and resuscitation specialists working in leadership positions in various categories of healthcare institutions. Method of collecting information: experts independently completed the online version of the questionnaire. Sampling principle: intentional. Survey period: April 12, 2023 — August 4, 2023. RESULTS: In 87 % of hospitals the medical information system (MIS) of the A&R service is part of the hospital’s MIS. Only in 23 % of hospitals all workstations of the anesthesiologist-resuscitator are connected to the MIS. Logging into a personal electronic workplace using access rights on any of the hospital’s personal computers was confirmed by 87 % of respondents. Hospitals in which anesthesiology and resuscitation equipment are not integrated into the MIS account for 89 %. In the case of branches with a local A&R information system, equipment in 44 % of similar branches is connected to it. Only in 51 % of hospitals the A&R receives data from the laboratory information system, the integration rates with the radiological information system are even lower and amount to only 34 %. The study revealed a significant problem with the introduction of clinical recommendations, drug reference books, as well as prevention and manipulation protocols, various requirements and, in particular, scales/indices for assessing the condition of patients into the MIS. CONCLUSIONS: For the full functioning of the MIS, organizational solutions are needed that are aimed at implementing the tasks, primary and future. The development and application of modern MIS in anesthesiology and resuscitation will contribute to the further development of the specialty and ensure patient safety and adequate quality of medical care. It is necessary to unify the requirements for MIS developers according to the main components in the functionality.

Indicators of health groups of pupils of general education organizations of the Russian Ministry of Defense (2010–2022)
Soldatov I.K., Evdokimov V.I., Arsentiev V.G., Makiev R.G., Golovinova V.Y.
BACKGROUND: Currently, there are 33 educational organizations of the Russian Ministry of Defense in Russia with a total staff of about 18 thousand students studying around the clock
AIM: to assess the dynamics of the health status of students in educational institutions of the Russian Ministry of Defense for 12 years from 2010/2011 to 2021/2022 academic year.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: We studied reports on Form 13К/МЕД, prepared by employees of educational organizations of the Russian Ministry of Defense, and calculated the dynamics of the level of assessments of the health status of students. The article presents arithmetic averages and their errors; the development of health groups was assessed using time series analysis, for which a second-order polynomial series was used.
RESULTS: In general educational institutions, there were 25.3 ± 0.9% of pupils with health group I, 60.7 ± 0.6% with group II, and 14.0 ± 1.2% with group III. In recent years, there has been a tendency to increase the number of pupils with health groups I and II and decrease with group III. These results indicated a properly organized educational process and optimization of medical support for students. The most positive dynamics of health status were observed in pupils aged 10–12 years, less pronounced — in pupils aged 16–18 years.
CONCLUSIONS: In some educational organizations of the Russian Ministry of Defense during the period studied, there were not entirely favorable trends in the organization of medical support for students, which aims at more personalized work with students.
Q3

Cluster analysis and visualization of keywords in papers on rotator cuff injuries published by international investigators
Vetoshkin A.A., Gusev S.S., Vasil’chenko N.V.
Q3
Medico-Biological and Socio-Psychological Problems of Safety in Emergency Situations
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 1
,

Open Access
|
Abstract
Introduction. Epidemiological studies demonstrate that in everyday life rotator cuff injuries are found in a wide range of population cohorts, varying from 10 to 15 % in younger adults and up to 20–30 % in patients aged 60 years and over. The significance of social and economic effects are therefore noteworthy.The objective of this study is to perform a cluster analysis and visualization of keywords in international publications on rotator cuff injuries using the VOSviewer software.Methods. The study analyzes publications related to rotator cuff injures published from 2013 to 2022 and selected from the PubMed international reference and bibliographic database for ‘Rotator Cuff Injuries’ search query. A total of 5,444 results were retrieved and relevant bibliographic information was uploaded in “.txt” format into the analytical software VOSviewer 1.6.20.Results and analysis. With the coefficient of determination (R2 = 0.96), the polynomial trend of article dynamics showed an increase in the number of publications. The average annual number of articles was (653 ± 48). With 10 repetitions, 504 keywords were analyzed and combined subsequently into 7 clusters. Cluster 1 was called ‘Trauma and injuries of the rotator cuff and tendons’. It contained 32.9 % of papers, with the total link strength of keywords 30.7 %. Cluster 2 titled ‘Results of arthroscopic reconstruction of rotator cuff injuries contained 27.7 % of papers with a total link strength of 27.5 %. Cluster 3 ‘Anatomy of the shoulder joint’ yielded 17.5 % and 17.4 % respectively; Cluster 4 ‘Biomechanics of the shoulder joint and rotator cuff’ – 7.3 % and 7.8 %; Cluster 5 ‘Postoperative analysis of surgical reconstruction of rotator cuff injuries’ – 7.1 % and 7.5 %; Cluster 6 ‘Surgical approaches (techniques) in the reconstruction of rotator cuff injuries’ – 4.6 % and 4.8 %; Cluster 7 ‘Structural reconstruction of shoulder function following reconstructive surgical of rotator cuff injuries’ – 3.9 % and 4.8 %. Leading authors and research schools were identified as well.Conclusion. The results provided an insight into the areas of research over the past 10 years and hence have provided information support for scientists and practitioners dealing with traumatic rotator cuff injuries.
Q3

Comparative analysis of the psychological status of the EMERCOM of Russia State Fire Service employees in correlation with work experience
Pyatibrat A.O., Sannikov M.V., Tsikunova N.S.
Q3
Medico-Biological and Socio-Psychological Problems of Safety in Emergency Situations
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 0
,

Open Access
|
Abstract
Relevance. Considering the modern geopolitical situation, the increased risk of terrorist attacks and large-scale disasters enforces more stringent requirements to the non-stop readiness to emergency response, overstretching efficiency parameters and stress tolerance in employees of the Ministry of Emergency Situations of Russia.The objective is to identify the indicators of professional psychological maturity among employees of the State Fire Service (GPS) of the Ministry of Emergency Situations of Russia.Methods. Using the Bass–Darky technique (BDHI), the WHOQOL-26 quality of life questionnaire and the Maslach burnout syndrome questionnaire (MBI), 182 employees of the Ministry of Emergency Situations of Russia were examined (98 individuals with work experience of 5 years and over and 84 individuals with work experience of 2 years or less); the control group included 122 individuals of non-extreme professions. The age of respondents ranged from 20 to 35 years. The survey data were verified for parameter distribution normality; arithmetic averages and standard deviations were calculated.Results and discussion. The performance of duties by firefighters in extreme scenarios (intense physical exertion and mental stress) may be associated with exhibiting negative personality manifestations, such as aggression, suspicion, hostility, psychological manifestations of professional burnout (emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced professional communication), decrease satisfaction with the quality of life. It turned out that firefighters with work experience of 5 years and over show a significantly higher rate of such manifestations and develop them faster than professionals doing other jobs.Conclusion. The conducted research shows the need for further studied regarding the psychological status of firefighters, especially after 5 years of professional experience.
Q3

Terrorism and its global biomedical consequences (2011 to 2020)
Evdokimov V.I., Shulenin N.S.
Q3
Medico-Biological and Socio-Psychological Problems of Safety in Emergency Situations
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 2
,

Open Access
|
Abstract
Relevance. Global terrorist activity is still far from decreasing, demanding extra studies regarding the risk indicators and compelling the countries to unite their efforts to combat terrorism across the world.The study objective is to analyze worldwide biomedical consequences of terrorism from 2011 to 2020 in order to optimize counterterrorism activities.Methods. The study analyzed global indicators of terrorist activities collected in the Global Terrorism Database (GTD) [https://www.start.umd.edu/]. The analyses focused on structure, dynamics and risks regarding fatalities and casualties (injuries) of terrorist attacks (TAs), including by type of attack, weapon, and incident location. The risk analysis focused on the risk of being affected by terrorist attack (death or injury) per 1 million of global population (Ч10-6). Mean data, the upper and lower quartiles, and the median were calculated (Me [Q1; Q3]).Results and analysis. From 2011 to 2020 the world’s annual average number of TAs was 110 thousand, or 10.7 [8.5; 14.1] thousand, with 25.8 thousand, or 23.1 [20.4; 35.3] thousand of people killed and 28.4 thousand, or 25.5 [18.8; 40.6] thousand of people affected. The polynomial trendlines for these indicators are inverted U-curves, showing less data in the latest observation period. TAs without biomedical consequences account for about 50%. However, the most severe medical and biological consequences were associated with the use of explosives and firearms, responsible for 84.4 % of all deaths and 91.4 % of all injuries. Massive sanitary losses associated with this type of TAs are a major challenge for medical care providers. 91.4 % of all TAs targeted military personnel, police officers, individual residents (or bystanders), government and business officials, responsible for 86.8% of all deaths and 84.2 % of all injuries. These population cohorts were in the risk groups for terrorism. The average individual risk of TA exposure among the world population stood at 1.49 • 10–6 incidents/(person • year), with the risk of death 3.49 • 10–6 deaths/(person • year) and trauma (injury) 3.87 • 10–6 injuries/(person • year). Meanwhile, according to the calculations by the International Labour Organization, the global average annual risk of death due to occupational injury for the same timespan (2011–2020) was by factors higher and amounted to (3.83 ± 0.13) • 10–4 deaths/(person • year).Conclusion. Terrorism is pursuing social instability, intimidation, and engulfing panic among the population, rather than medical and biological consequences. Considering that terrorism is impossible to eradicate completely across the world, it can be minimized by optimizing counterterrorism activities, based on TA weapon information or incident location.
Q3

Vitamins D and B12, homocysteine and laboratory markers of chronic atrophic gastritis in Chernobyl liquidators with metabolic syndrome
Aleksanin S.S., Alkhutova N.A., Kovyazina N.A., Ribnikov V.Y., Boyarkina M.P., Frolova M.J.
Q3
Medico-Biological and Socio-Psychological Problems of Safety in Emergency Situations
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 0
,

Open Access
|
Abstract
Relevance. An in-depth examination of Chernobyl liquidators treated at the Nikiforov Russian Center of Emergency and Radiation Medicine showed a higher incidence of chronic atrophic gastritis versus the comparison group. When combined with metabolic syndrome, the disease has vague and diverse clinical manifestations. Due to poor compliance among patients regarding invasive diagnostic procedures and elevated risk of chronic atrophic gastritis progressing into gastric adenocarcinoma, an extensive laboratory assessment is required to understand the grade of disorder in Chernobyl liquidators with metabolic syndrome.The study objective is to identify laboratory markers responsible for the chronic atrophic gastritis and metabolic syndrome comorbidity development in Chernobyl liquidatorsMethods. 97 male Chernobyl liquidators were divided into two groups – with and without metabolic syndrome. Pepsinogen-I, pepsinogen-II, gastrin-17 and H. pylori-IgG concentration in blood plasma was assessed quantitatively using enzyme immunoassay with “Gastropanel” (BIOHIT, Finland) reagent system in accordance with the manufacturer’s guidelines. Serum vitamin D (Access 2, Beckman Coulter, USA), vitamin B12 (UniCel DXi, Beckman Coulter, USA) and homocysteine (Immulite 2000 XPI, Siemens, USA) were measured using chemiluminescent immunoassay. Statistical analysis was performed using Statistica 10.0.Results and discussion. In the presence of metabolic syndrome both in Chernobyl liquidators and the comparison group, laboratory assessment showed higher detection frequency of gastric mucosal atrophy. In Chernobyl liquidators, the combination of vitamin B 12 deficiency and metabolic syndrome was associated with a doubled blood level of gastrin-17, while the median concentration was four times higher than the upper reference limit. Pepsinogen I level was below 70 mcg/L in 57.1 % of cases with combined B 12 deficiency and metabolic syndrome. In 70 % of cases, Chernobyl liquidators with fundal chronic atrophic gastritis revealed a combination of disorders, namely: vitamin B12 deficiency, hyperhomocysteinemia, pepsinogen I < 30 mcg/L, gastrin-17 > 30 pmol/L, pepsinogen I/pepsinogen II < 3. Moreover, Chernobyl liquidators with fundal chronic atrophic gastritis, showed vitamin D deficiency regardless of metabolic syndrome diagnosis. Vitamin D level in Chernobyl liquidators with antral chronic atrophic gastritis and without metabolic syndrome corresponded was within reference, while in the presence of metabolic syndrome, vitamin D level was close to deficiency.Conclusion. Laboratory findings demonstrate that in Chernobyl liquidators, metabolic syndrome and vitamin B12 deficiency are associated with a greater severity of atrophic changes in the stomach mucous membrane. This justifies the need for homocysteine, vitamins D and B12 lab tests to be included in the clinical and laboratory health monitoring of Chernobyl liquidators with combined metabolic syndrome and chronic atrophic gastritis comorbidity.
Top-100
Citing journals
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
7000
|
|
Lecture Notes in Computer Science
6321 citations, 5.62%
|
|
International Journal of Human Computer Studies
2932 citations, 2.61%
|
|
Computers in Human Behavior
1918 citations, 1.7%
|
|
International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction
1774 citations, 1.58%
|
|
Behaviour and Information Technology
822 citations, 0.73%
|
|
Frontiers in Psychology
791 citations, 0.7%
|
|
Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
776 citations, 0.69%
|
|
Communications in Computer and Information Science
658 citations, 0.58%
|
|
Interacting with Computers
656 citations, 0.58%
|
|
Sustainability
633 citations, 0.56%
|
|
Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction
592 citations, 0.53%
|
|
IEEE Access
580 citations, 0.52%
|
|
Computers and Education
562 citations, 0.5%
|
|
Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing
511 citations, 0.45%
|
|
ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction
447 citations, 0.4%
|
|
Human Factors
428 citations, 0.38%
|
|
IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics
405 citations, 0.36%
|
|
Applied Ergonomics
404 citations, 0.36%
|
|
Sensors
387 citations, 0.34%
|
|
Applied Sciences (Switzerland)
379 citations, 0.34%
|
|
SSRN Electronic Journal
374 citations, 0.33%
|
|
International Journal of Social Robotics
370 citations, 0.33%
|
|
Expert Systems with Applications
336 citations, 0.3%
|
|
Ergonomics
334 citations, 0.3%
|
|
PLoS ONE
297 citations, 0.26%
|
|
Education and Information Technologies
286 citations, 0.25%
|
|
Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services
285 citations, 0.25%
|
|
Information and Management
277 citations, 0.25%
|
|
Internet Research
272 citations, 0.24%
|
|
Decision Support Systems
256 citations, 0.23%
|
|
Multimedia Tools and Applications
244 citations, 0.22%
|
|
International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics
239 citations, 0.21%
|
|
Lecture Notes in Networks and Systems
236 citations, 0.21%
|
|
International Journal of Information Management
230 citations, 0.2%
|
|
Technological Forecasting and Social Change
228 citations, 0.2%
|
|
Virtual Reality
224 citations, 0.2%
|
|
Universal Access in the Information Society
222 citations, 0.2%
|
|
Journal of Medical Internet Research
222 citations, 0.2%
|
|
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
207 citations, 0.18%
|
|
Telematics and Informatics
201 citations, 0.18%
|
|
Studies in Computational Intelligence
197 citations, 0.18%
|
|
IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing
186 citations, 0.17%
|
|
Journal of Business Research
178 citations, 0.16%
|
|
Cognition, Technology and Work
177 citations, 0.16%
|
|
Interactive Learning Environments
171 citations, 0.15%
|
|
Transportation Research Part F: Traffic Psychology and Behaviour
171 citations, 0.15%
|
|
Information Technology and People
167 citations, 0.15%
|
|
Pen-and-Paper User Interfaces
166 citations, 0.15%
|
|
Personal and Ubiquitous Computing
163 citations, 0.14%
|
|
IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology
158 citations, 0.14%
|
|
User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction
157 citations, 0.14%
|
|
IEEE Transactions on Human-Machine Systems
157 citations, 0.14%
|
|
Multimodal Technologies and Interaction
153 citations, 0.14%
|
|
Lecture Notes in Business Information Processing
153 citations, 0.14%
|
|
Procedia Computer Science
150 citations, 0.13%
|
|
Theoretical Issues in Ergonomics Science
147 citations, 0.13%
|
|
Computer Supported Cooperative Work
147 citations, 0.13%
|
|
Human-Computer Interaction
146 citations, 0.13%
|
|
Information and Software Technology
143 citations, 0.13%
|
|
Computers and Security
139 citations, 0.12%
|
|
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
139 citations, 0.12%
|
|
ACM Computing Surveys
137 citations, 0.12%
|
|
Journal of Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making
137 citations, 0.12%
|
|
Information Processing and Management
136 citations, 0.12%
|
|
Scientific Reports
132 citations, 0.12%
|
|
Journal of Educational Computing Research
132 citations, 0.12%
|
|
Frontiers in Virtual Reality
132 citations, 0.12%
|
|
Information Systems Frontiers
126 citations, 0.11%
|
|
Proceedings of the ACM on Interactive Mobile Wearable and Ubiquitous Technologies
123 citations, 0.11%
|
|
Online Information Review
122 citations, 0.11%
|
|
Journal of Biomedical Informatics
121 citations, 0.11%
|
|
Knowledge-Based Systems
120 citations, 0.11%
|
|
Frontiers in Robotics and AI
120 citations, 0.11%
|
|
ACM Transactions on Interactive Intelligent Systems
119 citations, 0.11%
|
|
British Journal of Educational Technology
118 citations, 0.1%
|
|
Journal of Systems and Software
115 citations, 0.1%
|
|
Journal of Computer Assisted Learning
114 citations, 0.1%
|
|
Displays
113 citations, 0.1%
|
|
Journal on Multimodal User Interfaces
113 citations, 0.1%
|
|
Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking
111 citations, 0.1%
|
|
Electronics (Switzerland)
111 citations, 0.1%
|
|
International Journal of Bank Marketing
111 citations, 0.1%
|
|
Electronic Commerce Research and Applications
110 citations, 0.1%
|
|
Industrial Management and Data Systems
110 citations, 0.1%
|
|
Entertainment Computing
106 citations, 0.09%
|
|
Advanced Engineering Informatics
106 citations, 0.09%
|
|
Human Factors and Ergonomics In Manufacturing
104 citations, 0.09%
|
|
Journal of Knowledge Management
98 citations, 0.09%
|
|
Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments
95 citations, 0.08%
|
|
Technology in Society
95 citations, 0.08%
|
|
ACM Transactions on Human-Robot Interaction
95 citations, 0.08%
|
|
SAGE Open
94 citations, 0.08%
|
|
International Journal of Medical Informatics
92 citations, 0.08%
|
|
AI and Society
92 citations, 0.08%
|
|
Heliyon
91 citations, 0.08%
|
|
Computers in Industry
90 citations, 0.08%
|
|
Design Studies
90 citations, 0.08%
|
|
Safety Science
89 citations, 0.08%
|
|
Computer Graphics Forum
89 citations, 0.08%
|
|
Learning and Instruction
89 citations, 0.08%
|
|
Show all (70 more) | |
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
7000
|
Citing publishers
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
|
|
Springer Nature
20093 citations, 17.86%
|
|
Elsevier
18677 citations, 16.6%
|
|
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
11999 citations, 10.66%
|
|
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
11191 citations, 9.95%
|
|
Taylor & Francis
8637 citations, 7.68%
|
|
SAGE
4113 citations, 3.66%
|
|
Emerald
4082 citations, 3.63%
|
|
Wiley
3922 citations, 3.49%
|
|
MDPI
3796 citations, 3.37%
|
|
IGI Global
3392 citations, 3.01%
|
|
Frontiers Media S.A.
1850 citations, 1.64%
|
|
Oxford University Press
1077 citations, 0.96%
|
|
JMIR Publications
1037 citations, 0.92%
|
|
Cambridge University Press
694 citations, 0.62%
|
|
Hindawi Limited
491 citations, 0.44%
|
|
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
424 citations, 0.38%
|
|
Social Science Electronic Publishing
416 citations, 0.37%
|
|
World Scientific
321 citations, 0.29%
|
|
Walter de Gruyter
302 citations, 0.27%
|
|
Mary Ann Liebert
272 citations, 0.24%
|
|
IOS Press
227 citations, 0.2%
|
|
IOP Publishing
216 citations, 0.19%
|
|
CAIRN
176 citations, 0.16%
|
|
MIT Press
151 citations, 0.13%
|
|
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
127 citations, 0.11%
|
|
John Benjamins Publishing Company
125 citations, 0.11%
|
|
Trans Tech Publications
124 citations, 0.11%
|
|
Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)
116 citations, 0.1%
|
|
American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE)
107 citations, 0.1%
|
|
AIP Publishing
98 citations, 0.09%
|
|
ASME International
98 citations, 0.09%
|
|
Hogrefe Publishing Group
91 citations, 0.08%
|
|
PeerJ
86 citations, 0.08%
|
|
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
86 citations, 0.08%
|
|
Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET)
80 citations, 0.07%
|
|
EDP Sciences
73 citations, 0.06%
|
|
OpenEdition
68 citations, 0.06%
|
|
American Psychological Association (APA)
58 citations, 0.05%
|
|
BMJ
54 citations, 0.05%
|
|
IntechOpen
54 citations, 0.05%
|
|
American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA)
50 citations, 0.04%
|
|
American Chemical Society (ACS)
49 citations, 0.04%
|
|
Georg Thieme Verlag KG
46 citations, 0.04%
|
|
F1000 Research
46 citations, 0.04%
|
|
The Royal Society
43 citations, 0.04%
|
|
Scientific Research Publishing
43 citations, 0.04%
|
|
Morgan & Claypool Publishers
42 citations, 0.04%
|
|
SPIE-Intl Soc Optical Eng
40 citations, 0.04%
|
|
39 citations, 0.03%
|
|
SciELO
39 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Inderscience Publishers
37 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Institute of Electronics, Information and Communications Engineers (IEICE)
37 citations, 0.03%
|
|
36 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Annual Reviews
36 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Academy of Management
35 citations, 0.03%
|
|
SAE International
35 citations, 0.03%
|
|
American Accounting Association
33 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Science Alert
32 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
31 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Japan Society for Fuzzy Theory and Intelligent Informatics
29 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Pleiades Publishing
27 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Fuji Technology Press
27 citations, 0.02%
|
|
AOSIS
25 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Hans Publishers
25 citations, 0.02%
|
|
King Saud University
24 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Intellect
24 citations, 0.02%
|
|
The Ergonomics Society of Korea
24 citations, 0.02%
|
|
University of Chicago Press
22 citations, 0.02%
|
|
China Science Publishing & Media
22 citations, 0.02%
|
|
IAE School of Management Montpellier University
21 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Japan Society of Kansei Engineering
21 citations, 0.02%
|
|
LLC CPC Business Perspectives
20 citations, 0.02%
|
|
The Korea Contents Association
19 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Science in China Press
18 citations, 0.02%
|
|
The Japanese Society for Artificial Intelligence
18 citations, 0.02%
|
|
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
17 citations, 0.02%
|
|
17 citations, 0.02%
|
|
S. Karger AG
17 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Consortium Erudit
17 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Research Square Platform LLC
17 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
16 citations, 0.01%
|
|
American Speech Language Hearing Association
16 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Akademiai Kiado
16 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Cognizant, LLC
16 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Human Kinetics
16 citations, 0.01%
|
|
University of California Press
15 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Brill
15 citations, 0.01%
|
|
American Physical Society (APS)
15 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Ubiquity Press
15 citations, 0.01%
|
|
University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)
15 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Acoustical Society of America (ASA)
14 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Tech Science Press
14 citations, 0.01%
|
|
American Marketing Association
13 citations, 0.01%
|
|
American Institute of Mathematical Sciences (AIMS)
13 citations, 0.01%
|
|
International Journal of Information and Education Technology
13 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Vilnius Gediminas Technical University
13 citations, 0.01%
|
|
ifmbe proceedings
13 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO)
13 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Masaryk University Press
13 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Moscow State University of Psychology and Education
13 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Show all (70 more) | |
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
|
Publishing organizations
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
|
|
Stanford University
42 publications, 1.57%
|
|
University of Nottingham
39 publications, 1.46%
|
|
University College London
36 publications, 1.34%
|
|
University of Amsterdam
30 publications, 1.12%
|
|
University of York
30 publications, 1.12%
|
|
Carnegie Mellon University
28 publications, 1.05%
|
|
University of Manchester
27 publications, 1.01%
|
|
Georgia Institute of technology
27 publications, 1.01%
|
|
Pennsylvania State University
25 publications, 0.93%
|
|
University of New South Wales
22 publications, 0.82%
|
|
Virginia Tech
22 publications, 0.82%
|
|
University of Maryland, College Park
22 publications, 0.82%
|
|
University of Canterbury
21 publications, 0.78%
|
|
University of Melbourne
21 publications, 0.78%
|
|
Aalto University
20 publications, 0.75%
|
|
Eindhoven University of Technology
20 publications, 0.75%
|
|
Delft University of Technology
20 publications, 0.75%
|
|
Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
20 publications, 0.75%
|
|
Loughborough University
19 publications, 0.71%
|
|
Purdue University
19 publications, 0.71%
|
|
University of Toronto
19 publications, 0.71%
|
|
University of Calgary
19 publications, 0.71%
|
|
University of Edinburgh
18 publications, 0.67%
|
|
University of Southern California
18 publications, 0.67%
|
|
Lancaster University
17 publications, 0.63%
|
|
Tampere University
16 publications, 0.6%
|
|
University of Oulu
16 publications, 0.6%
|
|
Aalborg University
16 publications, 0.6%
|
|
University of Washington
16 publications, 0.6%
|
|
University of Saskatchewan
16 publications, 0.6%
|
|
University of Sussex
16 publications, 0.6%
|
|
Tsinghua University
15 publications, 0.56%
|
|
University of Southampton
15 publications, 0.56%
|
|
University of Birmingham
15 publications, 0.56%
|
|
University of Udine
15 publications, 0.56%
|
|
University of Queensland
15 publications, 0.56%
|
|
Yonsei University
15 publications, 0.56%
|
|
University of Central Florida
15 publications, 0.56%
|
|
University of British Columbia
15 publications, 0.56%
|
|
Cardiff University
15 publications, 0.56%
|
|
University of Turin
14 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Brunel University London
14 publications, 0.52%
|
|
National University of Singapore
14 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Syracuse University
14 publications, 0.52%
|
|
University of Bristol
14 publications, 0.52%
|
|
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
14 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Indiana University Bloomington
14 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
13 publications, 0.49%
|
|
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
13 publications, 0.49%
|
|
Queen Mary University of London
13 publications, 0.49%
|
|
University of Copenhagen
13 publications, 0.49%
|
|
Technical University of Berlin
13 publications, 0.49%
|
|
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
13 publications, 0.49%
|
|
University of Sheffield
13 publications, 0.49%
|
|
University of Bath
13 publications, 0.49%
|
|
University of Jyväskylä
12 publications, 0.45%
|
|
University of Glasgow
12 publications, 0.45%
|
|
Monash University
12 publications, 0.45%
|
|
Newcastle University
12 publications, 0.45%
|
|
University of Siegen
12 publications, 0.45%
|
|
University of Tokyo
12 publications, 0.45%
|
|
University of Aberdeen
11 publications, 0.41%
|
|
University of Michigan
11 publications, 0.41%
|
|
University of Leeds
11 publications, 0.41%
|
|
Grenoble Alpes University
10 publications, 0.37%
|
|
Polytechnic University of Turin
10 publications, 0.37%
|
|
Michigan State University
10 publications, 0.37%
|
|
University of Sydney
10 publications, 0.37%
|
|
University of Bari Aldo Moro
10 publications, 0.37%
|
|
North Carolina State University
10 publications, 0.37%
|
|
City University of Hong Kong
10 publications, 0.37%
|
|
University of Arizona
10 publications, 0.37%
|
|
University of California, Santa Barbara
10 publications, 0.37%
|
|
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
10 publications, 0.37%
|
|
Simon Fraser University
10 publications, 0.37%
|
|
University of Waterloo
10 publications, 0.37%
|
|
Université Paris-Saclay
10 publications, 0.37%
|
|
University College Dublin
10 publications, 0.37%
|
|
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
University of Twente
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
University of Cambridge
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Roskilde University
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Drexel University
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Queensland University of Technology
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Sungkyunkwan University
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Arizona State University
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
University of California, Irvine
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
University of Wisconsin–Madison
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Kochi University of Technology
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Pompeu Fabra University
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
University of Florida
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
University College Cork (National University of Ireland, Cork)
9 publications, 0.34%
|
|
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
8 publications, 0.3%
|
|
University of Turku
8 publications, 0.3%
|
|
Imperial College London
8 publications, 0.3%
|
|
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
8 publications, 0.3%
|
|
University of Oxford
8 publications, 0.3%
|
|
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology
8 publications, 0.3%
|
|
Show all (70 more) | |
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
|
Publishing organizations in 5 years
2
4
6
8
10
|
|
University College London
10 publications, 1.68%
|
|
University of Melbourne
10 publications, 1.68%
|
|
Tampere University
8 publications, 1.35%
|
|
Aalborg University
8 publications, 1.35%
|
|
Polytechnic University of Turin
7 publications, 1.18%
|
|
University of Manchester
7 publications, 1.18%
|
|
Monash University
7 publications, 1.18%
|
|
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
6 publications, 1.01%
|
|
University of Sydney
6 publications, 1.01%
|
|
Pennsylvania State University
6 publications, 1.01%
|
|
Virginia Tech
6 publications, 1.01%
|
|
University of Bristol
6 publications, 1.01%
|
|
University of Waterloo
6 publications, 1.01%
|
|
University College Dublin
6 publications, 1.01%
|
|
Grenoble Alpes University
5 publications, 0.84%
|
|
University of New South Wales
5 publications, 0.84%
|
|
Polytechnic University of Milan
5 publications, 0.84%
|
|
University of Oulu
5 publications, 0.84%
|
|
University of Turin
5 publications, 0.84%
|
|
University of Oslo
5 publications, 0.84%
|
|
Queensland University of Technology
5 publications, 0.84%
|
|
University of Queensland
5 publications, 0.84%
|
|
Sungkyunkwan University
5 publications, 0.84%
|
|
Hong Kong Polytechnic University
5 publications, 0.84%
|
|
Ulm University
5 publications, 0.84%
|
|
University of Amsterdam
5 publications, 0.84%
|
|
University of Saskatchewan
5 publications, 0.84%
|
|
Tsinghua University
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
Aalto University
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
University of Turku
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
University of Jyväskylä
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
University of Copenhagen
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
University of Nottingham
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
Carnegie Mellon University
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
University of Auckland
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
University of Canterbury
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
University of Washington
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
Lancaster University
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
Purdue University
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
University of Maryland, College Park
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
University of Barcelona
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
University of Florida
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
University of York
4 publications, 0.67%
|
|
Tongji University
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
University of Lisbon
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Eindhoven University of Technology
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Sun Yat-sen University
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Delft University of Technology
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
University of Fribourg
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Nanyang Technological University
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Queen Mary University of London
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Brunel University London
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
University of Warwick
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
University of Oxford
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Bern University of Applied Sciences
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Xi'an Jiaotong–Liverpool University
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
University of Trento
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
University of Glasgow
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Georgia Institute of technology
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Macquarie University
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Yonsei University
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Hanyang University
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Arizona State University
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Trinity College Dublin
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Chemnitz University of Technology
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Simon Fraser University
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Utrecht University
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Cardiff University
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Université Paris-Saclay
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
University of New Hampshire
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
University of Bath
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
University College Cork (National University of Ireland, Cork)
3 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Koc University
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Zayed University
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Beijing Normal University
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Zhejiang University
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Shanghai Jiao Tong University
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Tel Aviv University
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
University of Twente
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
University of Technology, Malaysia
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
University of Bordeaux
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Stockholm University
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
University of Zurich
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
University of Milano-Bicocca
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Imperial College London
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Durham University
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
University of Dundee
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
University of Cambridge
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
University of Vaasa
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Liverpool John Moores University
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Aarhus University
2 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Show all (70 more) | |
2
4
6
8
10
|
Publishing countries
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
|
|
USA
|
USA, 685, 25.57%
USA
685 publications, 25.57%
|
United Kingdom
|
United Kingdom, 522, 19.48%
United Kingdom
522 publications, 19.48%
|
Germany
|
Germany, 157, 5.86%
Germany
157 publications, 5.86%
|
China
|
China, 147, 5.49%
China
147 publications, 5.49%
|
Canada
|
Canada, 138, 5.15%
Canada
138 publications, 5.15%
|
Italy
|
Italy, 130, 4.85%
Italy
130 publications, 4.85%
|
Australia
|
Australia, 128, 4.78%
Australia
128 publications, 4.78%
|
Netherlands
|
Netherlands, 115, 4.29%
Netherlands
115 publications, 4.29%
|
France
|
France, 111, 4.14%
France
111 publications, 4.14%
|
Spain
|
Spain, 93, 3.47%
Spain
93 publications, 3.47%
|
Finland
|
Finland, 82, 3.06%
Finland
82 publications, 3.06%
|
Republic of Korea
|
Republic of Korea, 72, 2.69%
Republic of Korea
72 publications, 2.69%
|
Japan
|
Japan, 55, 2.05%
Japan
55 publications, 2.05%
|
Denmark
|
Denmark, 47, 1.75%
Denmark
47 publications, 1.75%
|
Sweden
|
Sweden, 41, 1.53%
Sweden
41 publications, 1.53%
|
Switzerland
|
Switzerland, 38, 1.42%
Switzerland
38 publications, 1.42%
|
New Zealand
|
New Zealand, 36, 1.34%
New Zealand
36 publications, 1.34%
|
Israel
|
Israel, 32, 1.19%
Israel
32 publications, 1.19%
|
Ireland
|
Ireland, 30, 1.12%
Ireland
30 publications, 1.12%
|
Norway
|
Norway, 28, 1.05%
Norway
28 publications, 1.05%
|
Belgium
|
Belgium, 26, 0.97%
Belgium
26 publications, 0.97%
|
Austria
|
Austria, 24, 0.9%
Austria
24 publications, 0.9%
|
Singapore
|
Singapore, 23, 0.86%
Singapore
23 publications, 0.86%
|
Portugal
|
Portugal, 21, 0.78%
Portugal
21 publications, 0.78%
|
Greece
|
Greece, 21, 0.78%
Greece
21 publications, 0.78%
|
Brazil
|
Brazil, 19, 0.71%
Brazil
19 publications, 0.71%
|
Turkey
|
Turkey, 16, 0.6%
Turkey
16 publications, 0.6%
|
Mexico
|
Mexico, 13, 0.49%
Mexico
13 publications, 0.49%
|
Malaysia
|
Malaysia, 10, 0.37%
Malaysia
10 publications, 0.37%
|
Poland
|
Poland, 10, 0.37%
Poland
10 publications, 0.37%
|
Iraq
|
Iraq, 8, 0.3%
Iraq
8 publications, 0.3%
|
Cyprus
|
Cyprus, 8, 0.3%
Cyprus
8 publications, 0.3%
|
Slovenia
|
Slovenia, 8, 0.3%
Slovenia
8 publications, 0.3%
|
Argentina
|
Argentina, 7, 0.26%
Argentina
7 publications, 0.26%
|
India
|
India, 7, 0.26%
India
7 publications, 0.26%
|
Romania
|
Romania, 7, 0.26%
Romania
7 publications, 0.26%
|
Chile
|
Chile, 7, 0.26%
Chile
7 publications, 0.26%
|
South Africa
|
South Africa, 7, 0.26%
South Africa
7 publications, 0.26%
|
Saudi Arabia
|
Saudi Arabia, 5, 0.19%
Saudi Arabia
5 publications, 0.19%
|
Iran
|
Iran, 4, 0.15%
Iran
4 publications, 0.15%
|
Thailand
|
Thailand, 4, 0.15%
Thailand
4 publications, 0.15%
|
Qatar
|
Qatar, 3, 0.11%
Qatar
3 publications, 0.11%
|
Lebanon
|
Lebanon, 3, 0.11%
Lebanon
3 publications, 0.11%
|
Malta
|
Malta, 3, 0.11%
Malta
3 publications, 0.11%
|
Namibia
|
Namibia, 3, 0.11%
Namibia
3 publications, 0.11%
|
UAE
|
UAE, 3, 0.11%
UAE
3 publications, 0.11%
|
Pakistan
|
Pakistan, 3, 0.11%
Pakistan
3 publications, 0.11%
|
Vietnam
|
Vietnam, 2, 0.07%
Vietnam
2 publications, 0.07%
|
Iceland
|
Iceland, 2, 0.07%
Iceland
2 publications, 0.07%
|
Serbia
|
Serbia, 2, 0.07%
Serbia
2 publications, 0.07%
|
Philippines
|
Philippines, 2, 0.07%
Philippines
2 publications, 0.07%
|
Czech Republic
|
Czech Republic, 2, 0.07%
Czech Republic
2 publications, 0.07%
|
Sri Lanka
|
Sri Lanka, 2, 0.07%
Sri Lanka
2 publications, 0.07%
|
Ecuador
|
Ecuador, 2, 0.07%
Ecuador
2 publications, 0.07%
|
Russia
|
Russia, 1, 0.04%
Russia
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Hungary
|
Hungary, 1, 0.04%
Hungary
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Jersey
|
Jersey, 1, 0.04%
Jersey
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Egypt
|
Egypt, 1, 0.04%
Egypt
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Colombia
|
Colombia, 1, 0.04%
Colombia
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Lesotho
|
Lesotho, 1, 0.04%
Lesotho
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Morocco
|
Morocco, 1, 0.04%
Morocco
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Nepal
|
Nepal, 1, 0.04%
Nepal
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Panama
|
Panama, 1, 0.04%
Panama
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Slovakia
|
Slovakia, 1, 0.04%
Slovakia
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Tunisia
|
Tunisia, 1, 0.04%
Tunisia
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Uruguay
|
Uruguay, 1, 0.04%
Uruguay
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Croatia
|
Croatia, 1, 0.04%
Croatia
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Show all (37 more) | |
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
|
Publishing countries in 5 years
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
|
|
USA
|
USA, 91, 15.32%
USA
91 publications, 15.32%
|
United Kingdom
|
United Kingdom, 82, 13.8%
United Kingdom
82 publications, 13.8%
|
China
|
China, 55, 9.26%
China
55 publications, 9.26%
|
Australia
|
Australia, 44, 7.41%
Australia
44 publications, 7.41%
|
Germany
|
Germany, 41, 6.9%
Germany
41 publications, 6.9%
|
Italy
|
Italy, 31, 5.22%
Italy
31 publications, 5.22%
|
Republic of Korea
|
Republic of Korea, 24, 4.04%
Republic of Korea
24 publications, 4.04%
|
Finland
|
Finland, 24, 4.04%
Finland
24 publications, 4.04%
|
Canada
|
Canada, 22, 3.7%
Canada
22 publications, 3.7%
|
France
|
France, 21, 3.54%
France
21 publications, 3.54%
|
Spain
|
Spain, 19, 3.2%
Spain
19 publications, 3.2%
|
Netherlands
|
Netherlands, 18, 3.03%
Netherlands
18 publications, 3.03%
|
Denmark
|
Denmark, 16, 2.69%
Denmark
16 publications, 2.69%
|
Norway
|
Norway, 14, 2.36%
Norway
14 publications, 2.36%
|
Brazil
|
Brazil, 11, 1.85%
Brazil
11 publications, 1.85%
|
Ireland
|
Ireland, 11, 1.85%
Ireland
11 publications, 1.85%
|
New Zealand
|
New Zealand, 10, 1.68%
New Zealand
10 publications, 1.68%
|
Sweden
|
Sweden, 10, 1.68%
Sweden
10 publications, 1.68%
|
Israel
|
Israel, 8, 1.35%
Israel
8 publications, 1.35%
|
Switzerland
|
Switzerland, 8, 1.35%
Switzerland
8 publications, 1.35%
|
Poland
|
Poland, 7, 1.18%
Poland
7 publications, 1.18%
|
Japan
|
Japan, 7, 1.18%
Japan
7 publications, 1.18%
|
Portugal
|
Portugal, 6, 1.01%
Portugal
6 publications, 1.01%
|
Singapore
|
Singapore, 6, 1.01%
Singapore
6 publications, 1.01%
|
Turkey
|
Turkey, 5, 0.84%
Turkey
5 publications, 0.84%
|
Belgium
|
Belgium, 4, 0.67%
Belgium
4 publications, 0.67%
|
Greece
|
Greece, 4, 0.67%
Greece
4 publications, 0.67%
|
Cyprus
|
Cyprus, 4, 0.67%
Cyprus
4 publications, 0.67%
|
Malaysia
|
Malaysia, 4, 0.67%
Malaysia
4 publications, 0.67%
|
Austria
|
Austria, 3, 0.51%
Austria
3 publications, 0.51%
|
India
|
India, 3, 0.51%
India
3 publications, 0.51%
|
Mexico
|
Mexico, 3, 0.51%
Mexico
3 publications, 0.51%
|
UAE
|
UAE, 3, 0.51%
UAE
3 publications, 0.51%
|
Saudi Arabia
|
Saudi Arabia, 3, 0.51%
Saudi Arabia
3 publications, 0.51%
|
Iran
|
Iran, 2, 0.34%
Iran
2 publications, 0.34%
|
Qatar
|
Qatar, 2, 0.34%
Qatar
2 publications, 0.34%
|
Romania
|
Romania, 2, 0.34%
Romania
2 publications, 0.34%
|
Slovenia
|
Slovenia, 2, 0.34%
Slovenia
2 publications, 0.34%
|
Chile
|
Chile, 2, 0.34%
Chile
2 publications, 0.34%
|
Russia
|
Russia, 1, 0.17%
Russia
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Argentina
|
Argentina, 1, 0.17%
Argentina
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Jersey
|
Jersey, 1, 0.17%
Jersey
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Iraq
|
Iraq, 1, 0.17%
Iraq
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Colombia
|
Colombia, 1, 0.17%
Colombia
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Lesotho
|
Lesotho, 1, 0.17%
Lesotho
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Lebanon
|
Lebanon, 1, 0.17%
Lebanon
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Malta
|
Malta, 1, 0.17%
Malta
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Morocco
|
Morocco, 1, 0.17%
Morocco
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Namibia
|
Namibia, 1, 0.17%
Namibia
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Nepal
|
Nepal, 1, 0.17%
Nepal
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Pakistan
|
Pakistan, 1, 0.17%
Pakistan
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Serbia
|
Serbia, 1, 0.17%
Serbia
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Thailand
|
Thailand, 1, 0.17%
Thailand
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Tunisia
|
Tunisia, 1, 0.17%
Tunisia
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Uruguay
|
Uruguay, 1, 0.17%
Uruguay
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Philippines
|
Philippines, 1, 0.17%
Philippines
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Sri Lanka
|
Sri Lanka, 1, 0.17%
Sri Lanka
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Ecuador
|
Ecuador, 1, 0.17%
Ecuador
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Show all (28 more) | |
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
|
12 profile journal articles
Kostakos Vassilis

University of Melbourne
272 publications,
5 868 citations
h-index: 39
4 profile journal articles
Santoro Carmen
101 publications,
1 819 citations
h-index: 21
1 profile journal article
Pandey Rahul
🥼 🤝
Chitkara University
217 publications,
4 525 citations
h-index: 38
1 profile journal article
Bajo Teresa
135 publications,
2 924 citations
h-index: 31