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Scopus

Scopus

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What is Scopus?

Scopus is a large abstract and citation database of peer-reviewed literature: scientific journals, books and conference proceedings. It delivers a comprehensive overview of the world's research output in the fields of science, technology, medicine, social sciences, and arts and humanities. Scopus is commonly used by researchers, librarians, and academic institutions to discover research, analyze trends, and track the impact of scholarly work.

What other technologies are related to Scopus?

Scopus Competitor Technologies

Web of Science is a competing citation database and research discovery tool, similar to Scopus.
mentioned alongside Scopus in 49% (239) of relevant job posts
PubMed is a free database primarily indexing biomedical literature, and overlaps with Scopus's coverage in life sciences. It is a competing database, though it is free, and mostly focused on a single field.
mentioned alongside Scopus in 6% (166) of relevant job posts
Google Scholar is a freely available web search engine indexing the full text or metadata of scholarly literature across many disciplines. It is a competitor, though less curated than Scopus.
mentioned alongside Scopus in 13% (77) of relevant job posts
Embase is a biomedical and pharmacological database, also from Elsevier, competing with Scopus in those subject areas.
mentioned alongside Scopus in 12% (81) of relevant job posts

Which organizations are mentioning Scopus?

Organization
Industry
Matching Teams
Matching People
Scopus
Elsevier
Scientific and Technical Services

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