Position in the ranking is based on each scientist’s D-index using data compiled from
OpenAlex and CrossRef by December 21st 2022.
This ranking lists all the best researchers from the Computer Science discipline and
affiliated with Johannes Kepler University of Linz.
There are a total of 11 researchers included.
The total sum for the D-index values for the best scientists
in Johannes Kepler University of Linz is 471 with a mean value for
the h-index of 42.82. The total sum of
publications for the best scientists in Johannes Kepler University of Linz is 2,723 with the
mean value for publications per scientist of 247.55.
Overview
Johannes Kepler University of Linz
The Johannes Kepler University of Linz (JKU) is a higher education public institution located in Linz, Austria. It was founded as the College of Social Sciences, Economics, and Business in 1966. In 1975, the college was awarded the status of a university and gained its current name in honor of the astronomer Johannes Kepler. It is among the top public universities in Austria.
Johannes Kepler University of Linz Key Statistics
The university comprises four faculties and three schools. These include the Faculty of Social and Economic Sciences, the Faculty of Science and Technology, the Faculty of Law, the Linz School of Education, and the Business School. It offers courses on a wide variety of topics at over 120 different institutes.
Johannes Kepler University has around 23,000 students enrolled in its various programs, 19,780 of whom are domestic students and 3,220 foreign students. It employs 1,283 staff members in total, including approximately 130 professors.
The library system of JKU encompasses the main campus library, two faculty libraries, and 13 specialist libraries. They provide access to around 1,250,000 books, 23,000 e-Books, 1,200 print journals, and 22,000 e-Journals.
Other Johannes Kepler University of Linz key statistics include its international exchange agreements with more than 150 universities in 50 countries worldwide.
Johannes Kepler University of Linz Key Research
Research at JKU is carried out at an international top-level, with researchers who have won the prestigious prizes of the European Research Council and the Wittgenstein Prize.
The university’s top three research fields are material science, computer science, and mathematics. Its researchers have been published in publications like arXiv: Learning, Social Science Research Network, and Advanced Functional Materials. The researchers at JKU had also been invited to attend/present papers at prestigious conferences, such as the International Conference on Learning Representations, Neural Information Processing Systems, and the International Symposium/Conference on Music Information Retrieval.
The most cited article produced by Johannes Kepler University of Linz research is Gunes et al.’s (2007) “Conjugated polymer-based organic solar cells,” published in Chemical Reviews. It has received a total of 7,234 citations. JKU’s second most cited paper is Brabec et al.’s (2001) “Plastic solar cells,” published in Advanced Functional Materials and has been cited 5,239 times so far. The third most cited study is Hoppe and Sariciftci’s “Organic solar cells: An overview,” published in the Journal of Materials Research in 2004. It has been cited by 2,913 papers, articles, and other publications.
The other most cited article by JKU is Heusel et al.’s (2017) “GANs trained by a two time-scale update rule converge to a local nash equilibrium,” published in Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems. It has received a total of 2,527 citations.
The research centers and institutes of JKU include the Linz Center of Mechatronics, the Software Competence Center Hagenberg, and the LIT Lab for Secure and Correct Systems.
World
National
Scholar
D-index
D-index (Discipline H-index) only includes papers and citation values for an examined discipline in
contrast to General H-index which accounts for publications across all disciplines.
Our research was coordinated by Imed Bouchrika, PhD, a computer scientist with a well-established record
of collaboration on a number of international research projects with different partners from the academic
community. His role was to make sure all data remained unbiased, accurate, and up-to-date.
We list only scientists having D-Index >= 30 within the area of
Computer Science. If you or other scholars are not listed, we appreciate if you can
contact us.