Scimago Journal & Country Rank

2013 Asia-Pacific Symposium on Electromagnetic Compatibility, APEMC 2013

Country

United States

Universities and research institutions in United States
Media Ranking in United States

Subject Area and Category

Publisher


H-Index

6

Publication type

Conferences and Proceedings

ISSN

-

Coverage

-

Information

Homepage

Scope

The Victorian Chapter (Australia) of the IEEE EMC Society recently hosted the 2013 Asia-Pacific International Symposium and Exhibition on Electromagnetic Compatibility. APEMC 2013 was held on 20-23 May 2013 in Melbourne. The event was the 5th APEMC Symposium and followed previous conferences in Singapore (2008, 2012), Beijing (2010) and Jeju Island, South Korea (2011). It was hosted by the EMC Society of Australia, with the IEEE EMC Society as Technical Co-Sponsor.[...] The Symposium took place at the iconic Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) and included a plenary session with two keynote presentations, 25 technical oral sessions and one poster session, 16 tutorials and workshops, and a trade exhibition. A welcome reception with a tour through the MCG, and a Symposium Dinner were the highlights of the social program. The IEEE EMC Society conducted a Chapter Chair Retreat, and the APEMC Steering Committee had a meeting during the Symposium. A total of 132 papers had been submitted from 21 countries. Of those 118 had been accepted, some after mandatory changes had been requested by the reviewers. Countries with the highest numbers of accepted papers were Australia (23), Japan (20), and China (17). The number of papers was down compared to the 2012 APEMC Symposium in Singapore, but there was a good mix of countries and topics; as the name of the conference suggests, Asian countries dominated, but Europe and America were also well represented. Topics which attracted large numbers of submissions were Measurement, Computation, EMC in Radio Astronomy, and High Power Electromagnetics. Join the conversation about this journal
SJR

The SJR is a size-independent prestige indicator that ranks journals by their 'average prestige per article'. It is based on the idea that 'all citations are not created equal'. SJR is a measure of scientific influence of journals that accounts for both the number of citations received by a journal and the importance or prestige of the journals where such citations come from It measures the scientific influence of the average article in a journal, it expresses how central to the global scientific discussion an average article of the journal is.

YearSJR
20160.133
20170.104
20180.167
Total Documents

Evolution of the number of published documents. All types of documents are considered, including citable and non citable documents.

YearDocuments
20160
20170
20180
Citations per document

This indicator counts the number of citations received by documents from a journal and divides them by the total number of documents published in that journal. The chart shows the evolution of the average number of times documents published in a journal in the past two, three and four years have been cited in the current year. The two years line is equivalent to journal impact factor ™ (Thomson Reuters) metric.

Cites per documentYearValue
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20160.189
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20170.162
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20180.338
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20160.189
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20170.162
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20180.338
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20160.189
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20170.162
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20180.000
Total Cites 
Self-Cites

Evolution of the total number of citations and journal's self-citations received by a journal's published documents during the three previous years.
Journal Self-citation is defined as the number of citation from a journal citing article to articles published by the same journal.

CitesYearValue
Self Cites20160
Self Cites20170
Self Cites20180
Total Cites201614
Total Cites201712
Total Cites201825
External Cites per Doc 
Cites per Doc

Evolution of the number of total citation per document and external citation per document (i.e. journal self-citations removed) received by a journal's published documents during the three previous years. External citations are calculated by subtracting the number of self-citations from the total number of citations received by the journal’s documents.

CitesYearValue
External Cites per document20160.189
External Cites per document20170.162
External Cites per document20180.338
Cites per document20160.189
Cites per document20170.162
Cites per document20180.338
% International Collaboration

International Collaboration accounts for the articles that have been produced by researchers from several countries. The chart shows the ratio of a journal's documents signed by researchers from more than one country; that is including more than one country address.

YearInternational Collaboration
20160
20170
20180
Citable documents 
Non-citable documents

Not every article in a journal is considered primary research and therefore "citable", this chart shows the ratio of a journal's articles including substantial research (research articles, conference papers and reviews) in three year windows vs. those documents other than research articles, reviews and conference papers.

DocumentsYearValue
Non-citable documents20161
Non-citable documents20171
Non-citable documents20181
Citable documents201673
Citable documents201773
Citable documents201873
Cited documents 
Uncited documents

Ratio of a journal's items, grouped in three years windows, that have been cited at least once vs. those not cited during the following year.

DocumentsYearValue
Uncited documents201662
Uncited documents201763
Uncited documents201859
Cited documents201612
Cited documents201711
Cited documents201815
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