Radio frequency identification (RFID) is an exciting multidisciplinary field with numerous applications. The 2015 IEEE International Conference on RFID is the premier conference for exchanging all technical research in RFID. The conference attendance boasts an outstanding mix of practitioners and researchers from industry and academia. The IEEE RFID conference is an opportunity to share, discuss, and witness research results in all areas of RFID technologies and their applications.
The conference seeks the highest quality research usually accepting about one-third of the papers submitted. Accepted authors benefit from disseminating their research to a mixed audience that is equal parts industry and academia that outnumber authors and presenters by a factor of 6 to 1.
IEEE RFID 2015 received 79 paper submissions. In total, 26 papers were accepted after a very thorough double-blind review process, leading to an average acceptance ratio of 33%. Our 63 TPC Members provided a total of 243 reviews (3.3 per paper) along with a very vigorous discussion phase. The acceptance ratio reflects both the competitive nature of IEEE RFID conferences and the high quality of the papers presented this year. For the Poster and Demo Session, which gives authors the opportunity to present preliminary and exploratory research, 20 submissions were accepted. A breakdown into the different tracks and a comparison to 2010 through 2013 can be found below. IEEE RFID continues to be an international conference, with 48% of the submissions from the United States (increasing), 35% from Europe, Middle East, and Africa (constant), 15% from the Asia/Pacific region (decreasing), as well 2% from Latin America (decreasing).
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.
Year
SJR
2016
0.359
2017
0.368
2018
0.288
Total Documents
Evolution of the number of published documents. All types of documents are considered, including citable and non citable documents.
Year
Documents
2016
0
2017
0
2018
0
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 document
Year
Value
Cites / Doc. (4 years)
2016
2.893
Cites / Doc. (4 years)
2017
3.821
Cites / Doc. (4 years)
2018
2.821
Cites / Doc. (3 years)
2016
2.893
Cites / Doc. (3 years)
2017
3.821
Cites / Doc. (3 years)
2018
2.821
Cites / Doc. (2 years)
2016
2.893
Cites / Doc. (2 years)
2017
3.821
Cites / Doc. (2 years)
2018
0.000
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.
Cites
Year
Value
Self Cites
2016
0
Self Cites
2017
0
Self Cites
2018
0
Total Cites
2016
81
Total Cites
2017
107
Total Cites
2018
79
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.
Cites
Year
Value
External Cites per document
2016
2.893
External Cites per document
2017
3.821
External Cites per document
2018
2.821
Cites per document
2016
2.893
Cites per document
2017
3.821
Cites per document
2018
2.821
% 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.
Year
International Collaboration
2016
0
2017
0
2018
0
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.
Documents
Year
Value
Non-citable documents
2016
1
Non-citable documents
2017
1
Non-citable documents
2018
1
Citable documents
2016
27
Citable documents
2017
27
Citable documents
2018
27
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.
Documents
Year
Value
Uncited documents
2016
4
Uncited documents
2017
8
Uncited documents
2018
7
Cited documents
2016
24
Cited documents
2017
20
Cited documents
2018
21
% Female Authors
Evolution of the percentage of female authors.
Year
Female Percent
2016
0.00
2017
0.00
2018
0.00
Documents cited by public policy (Overton)
Evolution of the number of documents cited by public policy documents according to Overton database.
Documents
Year
Value
Overton
2016
0
Overton
2017
0
Overton
2018
0
Documents related to SDGs (UN)
Evolution of the number of documents related to Sustainable Development Goals defined by United Nations. Available from 2018 onwards.
Documents
Year
Value
SDG
2018
0
Estimated APC
It estimates the article processing charges (APCs) a journal might charge, based on its visibility, prestige, and impact as measured by the SJR. It does not reflect the actual APC, but rather a calculated approximation based on journal quality.
Year
Est. APC (USD)
2016
2756
2017
2762
2018
2726
Estimated financial value
It represents the potential financial worth of a journal. It is obtained by multiplying the journal's Estimated APC by the total number of citable documents published over the past five years. This value reflects the hypothetical revenue a journal could generate based on its estimated publication costs and scholarly output.
Year
Est. value (USD)
2016
0
2017
0
2018
0
Show this widget in your own website
Just copy the code below and paste within your html code: