Altmetric Explorer is a valuable tool that helps SU researchers track how their publications and creative works are gaining attention online. Unlike traditional metrics which often rely on citation counts in academic journals, alternative metrics (altmetrics for short) provide a broader picture of impact by collecting data from freely available web sources. These sources include social media, news outlets, blogs, policy documents, online reference managers (like Mendeley), and more. Altmetric Explorer distinguishes between different types of links to ensure that all mentions of the same research output are connected.
Altmetrics can be useful in a number of ways:
Altmetric Explorer and Dimensions are part of Digital Science. This means that Dimensions and Altmetric Explorer can be used together to enhance the data found in both databases. When searching for individuals or groups, it is optimal to start the search in Dimensions and then export the dataset to Altmetric Explorer. For more details on how to use Dimensions and Altmetric Explorer together, visit the following:
This video offers a brief overview of Altmetric Explorer:
For more information on altmetrics and ways to identify and track the impact of research and creative works, visit the following guide:
See the Data Sources box below for information about which publications, platforms, and other sources provide the content in Altmetric Explorer.
Altmetric Explorer tracks a variety of online data sources of research & creative outputs:
The attention data is visualized using a colorful badge called the Altmetric Attention Score (or "donut"), which represents both the quantity and quality of attention received. Each color in the badge indicates the source of the mention, such as red for news outlets, purple for policy documents, patents or clinical guidelines, and blue for posts on social media. The number in the middle is a weighted score, not a count of mentions.

Each research output in Altmetric Explorer has an Altmetric Details Page, which you can reach by clicking on the title of a research output.
The screenshot above shows the "Altmetric Details Page" for the research output Observation of Gravitational Waves from a Binary Black Hole Merger, published in Physical review Letters in 2016. Among other details, the page shows that this research output is "in the top 5% of all research outputs scored by Altmetric" and that it is number 1 of all research outputs from Physical Review Letters.
An Altmetric Details Page highlights a research output's:
Also included are links to view the research output:
There is also a link to receive an email alert about new mentions of the research output.