ISI Ratings
Of his more than 900 publications, six have been cited 500 or more times, 16 over 300, 82 over 100, and 203 over 50. He has an h-index of 92. For the period from January 1997 to August 31, 2007, he was ranked by the Institute for Scientific Information as the third most cited chemist with a total of 14,038 citations from 304 papers at a frequency of 46.2 citations per paper. During 35 years, over 260 PhD students and postdoctoral researchers have been trained in his laboratories, and more than 60 have subsequently embarked upon independent academic careers. The Institute for Scientific Information (ISI) also predicted that Fraser Stoddart was a likely winner of the 2005 Nobel Prize in Chemistry along with George M. Whitesides and Seiji Shinkai for their contributions to molecular self-assembly. However, the Prize eventually went to Robert Grubbs, Richard Schrock and Yves Chauvin.
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