Abstract:
This study aims to explore the SCImago Institutional Ranking (SIR) 2022 to
gain insight into the profile of Sri Lankan universities. Additionally, the study
aims to investigate whether there was consistency between Scopus profiles
and SIR. Furthermore, the research delves into various factors that impact the
research ranking of an academic institution as defined by SCImago, which
goes beyond just the number of publications. The data for the study were
retrieved from SIR (2022) and Scopus database (2022) and were
systematically analyzed. The author chose the following options to extract the
data for overall ranking, Universities as a sector, Sri Lanka as the country and
2022 as the year based on all subject areas. The study found that the number
of Sri Lankan universities eligible for the SCImago ranking has gradually
increased from 2013 to 2022. According to SIR, the University of Colombo is
the top-ranked academic institution in Sri Lanka, followed by Rajarata
University of Sri Lanka and the University of Jaffna. Out of the fourteen
universities in Sri Lanka, eight were ranked by SIR, with six being in the Q1 (first cluster) and two in the Q2 (second cluster). Interestingly, the Rajarata
University of Sri Lanka was ranked 1st in SIR 2022 for its research
performance among Sri Lankan universities with their 105 publications
indexed in Scopus. Analysis of data shows that there is no relationship
between the Scopus profile and the SIR. It is also suggesting that having a high
number of articles in the Scopus database does not necessarily guarantee a
high rank in SIR. The SIR not only depends on the number of publications but
also on other factors related to the quality of the publications. Therefore,
universities cannot assume their SIR position by considering only the quantity
of Scopus indexed publications. SIR mainly considers the quality of the
publications to measure the institutional research performance. The SCImago
ranking evaluates the institutional whole performance through three of its
indicators, and research performance is measured only through Scopus
indexed publication. Sri Lankan publications in local and international
journals which are not indexed in Scopus and conference papers were not
counted for research performance. The findings of this study will facilitate
the institutions to compare their position with other institutions, standardize
their research practices, improve the international collaboration to uphold the
academic benchmark, regulate their research publications and promote their
visibility and finally support government bodies and policymakers regarding
fund allocations and strategic planning.