Climatology & Weather Forecasting -innovations

A Climatology and Weather Forecasting journal's impact factor is a measure that reflects the average number of citations made to recent articles published in the journal. It is often used as a proxy for a journal's relative importance within its field, with journals with higher impact factors deemed more important than those with lower ones. The impact factor was invented by the Institute for Scientific Knowledge director, Eugene Garfield. Climatology and weather predictions Variables for certain articles indexed in the Journal Citation Reports are determined annually beginning in 1975. To increase its impact factor a journal can adopt editorial policies. For instance, journals may publish a greater percentage of review articles that are widely quoted more than research papers. Review articles will therefore increase the impact factor of the journal and thus would also have the highest impact factors in their respective fields. 

High Impact List of Articles

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