What is the difference between SCI and SCIE Journals? In practical terms, there is virtually no distinction today. The distinction is purely historical. This guide will explain the official 2020 update from Clarivate, clarify why the confusion existed, and direct your focus to what truly matters for evaluating journal quality now.
In early 2020, Clarivate Analytics, the organization that curates the Web of Science, officially integrated its original SCI list into the larger Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE) database. This means the separate, smaller SCI list is no longer maintained. All journals that once held the prestigious "SCI" designation are now part of the unified SCIE database. Therefore, the SCIE is the single, authoritative, and definitive index for top-tier international science journals.
When your university, a research grant, or a tenure committee asks for a publication in an "SCI journal," they are referring to a journal that is indexed in the modern SCIE database.
For many years, these two lists existed side-by-side, creating a perception of a two-tiered system. The 2020 merger officially ended this era of confusion.
Since the "SCI vs. SCIE" debate is settled, your focus should shift from the journal's name to its performance. The true measure of a journal's prestige and a paper's impact is its ranking within the SCIE database.
This ranking is determined by the annual Journal Citation Reports (JCR), which groups journals into four tiers. For a comprehensive breakdown of how this system works, you can read Complete Guide to Q1–Q4 Quartiles.
The quartile rankings are primarily based on a journal's Journal Impact Factor (JIF). This metric is a direct measure of a journal's influence and is calculated annually.
Specifically, the JIF measures the average number of citations received per paper published in that journal during the two preceding years. A higher Impact Factor generally indicates that a journal's articles are, on average, cited more frequently by other researchers, suggesting greater visibility and influence within its field.
While the JIF is a powerful metric, comparing Impact Factors across different scientific disciplines can be misleading. This is precisely why the quartile ranking—which compares a journal only to its direct peers—provides a more valuable and field-normalized context for a journal's true prestige.
It's time for the academic community to move past the outdated SCI vs. SCIE debate.
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