Journals Ranked by Impact:
Statistics & Probability
Rank
2008 Impact Factor
Impact 2005-09
Impact 1981-2009
1
Econometrica
(3.87)
Econometrica
(7.24)
Econometrica
(64.87)
2
Biostatistics
(3.39)
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series
B
(5.68)
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series
B
(37.19)
3
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series
B
(2.84)
Biostatistics
(5.60)
Journal of the American Statistical Association
(31.11)
4
Annals of Applied Statistics
(2.45)
Journal of the American Statistical Association
(5.59)
Biometrika
(27.93)
5
Journal of the American Statistical Association
(2.39)
Statistical Science
(4.84)
Annals of Statistics
(25.11)
6
Annals of Statistics
(2.31)
Multivariate Behavioral Research
(4.45)
Biometrics
(24.57)
7
Statistical Methods in Medical Research
(2.18)
Annals of Statistics
(4.36)
Technometrics
(21.29)
8
Statistical Science
(2.14)
Chemometrics and Intelligent Laboratory Systems
(4.21)
Multivariate Behavioral Research
(20.81)
9
Statistics in Medicine
(2.11)
Statistical Methods in Medical Research
(3.87)
Statistical Science
(19.74)
10
Biometrics
(1.97)
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series
A
(3.74)
Journal of Business & Economic Statistics
(18.27)
The above table compares the citation impact of journals in a given
field as measured over three different time spans. The left-hand column
ranks journals based on their 2008 "impact factor," as enumerated in
the current edition of
Journal Citations Report®.
The 2008 impact factor is calculated by taking the number of all
current citations to source items published in a journal over the
previous two years and dividing by the number of articles published
in the journal during the same period--in other words, a ratio
between citations and recent citable items published. The rankings
in the next two columns show impact over longer time spans, based on
figures from
Journal Performance Indicators. In these
columns, total citations to a journal's published papers are divided
by the total number of papers that the journal published, producing
a citations-per-paper impact score over a five-year period (middle
column) and a 29-year period (right-hand column).