Scopus Source List is one of the first places authors should check before trusting a journal or conference indexing claim.
A website may say "Scopus indexed". A conference poster may show the Scopus logo. A journal may mention Scopus in its homepage footer. But none of these should be treated as final proof. The safer step is to check the source title, publisher and coverage status through official source information.
The Scopus Source List is a way to check sources covered by Scopus. Authors can use it to look up journal titles, book series, conference proceedings sources and related publication information.
The key word is source. A paper is usually connected to a source title, and that title may not be the same as the conference name or marketing title.
Checking the Scopus Source List helps authors avoid common mistakes:
Indexing is not just a label. It is a record that should be verified.
Before submitting, check:
If the title, ISSN or publisher does not match, slow down and ask for clarification.
Conference papers may be published through a proceedings series, journal special issue or book series. The conference name may not appear as the indexed source.
For example, a conference may have one public event title, while the paper is published under a proceedings source with a different title. That is why authors should check the publication route before paying the registration fee.
AIScholar can help authors discover upcoming academic conferences by subject, date, location and index label. Use it as a starting point, then verify the official source details before submitting. Explore academic conferences on AIScholar:
Q: Does appearing in the Scopus Source List guarantee every paper is indexed?
A: No. Authors still need to check the exact publication route, source coverage and timing.
Q: Is a Scopus logo on a conference page enough proof?
A: No. The official source record is stronger than a logo or promotional claim.
Q: Can Scopus coverage change?
A: Yes. Sources may change coverage status, so current information should be checked.
Q: What if the conference name is not in the list?
A: Search the proceedings source title, publisher and ISBN or ISSN. The event name may not be the indexed source.
The most practical way to avoid indexing confusion is to verify the source title, coverage status and publication route before submitting. That is how authors should use the Scopus Source List.