Best Researcher Award

                 Xiaolin Hou
Affiliation Beijing University of Agriculture
Country China
Scopus ID 37045332600
Documents 61
Citations 1319
h-index 19
Subject Area Pharmacology
Event International Research Hypothesis Excellence Award
ORCID 0000-0003-4423-635X

Xiaolin Hou
Beijing University of Agriculture, China

Xiaolin Hou  the Best Researcher Award article presents an academic overview of Xiaolin Hou, a researcher affiliated with Beijing University of Agriculture, China. The profile highlights scholarly activities, publication output, and research impact indicators associated with the field of pharmacology and related interdisciplinary domains. The article further evaluates the research profile in the context of recognition through the International Research Hypothesis Excellence Award.[1]

Abstract

This article summarizes available scholarly information concerning Xiaolin Hou and evaluates academic metrics and research contributions associated with pharmacological investigations. Academic productivity indicators such as Scopus-indexed publications, citation metrics, and research visibility provide measurable evidence of scientific activity and scholarly engagement.[1]

Keywords

Pharmacology; Academic Research; Citation Analysis; Scholarly Impact; Scopus; Research Evaluation; Best Researcher Award

Introduction

Research evaluation frequently considers scientific productivity, publication quality, and measurable academic influence. Scholarly databases such as Scopus provide standardized metrics including h-index values and citation indicators for assessing research output.[2]

Research Profile

Xiaolin Hou is a professor and researcher at the College of Veterinary Medicine, Beijing University of Agriculture, China. His research focuses on veterinary pharmacology, animal disease prevention, pathogen detection, antimicrobial resistance, and viral infection mechanisms. He serves as an academic leader in Basic Veterinary Medicine and has contributed significantly to animal health and disease control research.

Research Contributions

The researcher demonstrates measurable contributions in pharmacology and scientific investigation through indexed publications and participation in academic dissemination activities. Research outcomes contribute to literature development and interdisciplinary knowledge exchange.[1]

Publications

Xiaolin Hou is a researcher and professor at Beijing University of Agriculture, China, specializing in veterinary medicine, pathogen biology, animal disease prevention, and antimicrobial research. His scholarly work includes numerous representative indexed studies available through international scientific databases, contributing significantly to veterinary pharmacology and infectious disease research.[3]

Research Impact

Citation indicators and h-index measurements are commonly employed to assess scholarly visibility and influence. Available metrics suggest substantial research engagement and dissemination within indexed academic environments.[2]

Award Suitability

The profile characteristics associated with Xiaolin Hou indicate alignment with evaluation categories commonly considered for academic distinction programs, including publication output, scholarly impact, citation metrics, and contribution to research communities.[4]

Conclusion

The presented academic profile summarizes institutional affiliation, publication metrics, and scholarly indicators associated with research productivity. Such indicators contribute to broader assessments used in academic recognition and research award programs.

References

  1. Elsevier. (n.d.). Scopus author details: Xiaolin Hou, Author ID 37045332600. Scopus.
    https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=37045332600
  2. DOI Foundation. Digital Object Identifier resource.
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.phrs.2020.104850
  3. International Research Hypothesis Excellence Award Program. Award evaluation and recognition framework.
    https://researchhypothesis.com/
  4. Shen, R., Guo, J., Liu, X., Yin, P., & Hou, X. (2026). Forsythoside A inhibits avian infectious bronchitis virus infection by binding the S1 subunit. Virology. Advance online publication.
Xiaolin Hou | Pharmacology | Best Researcher Award

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