Contents
Can I sort Google Scholar results by number of citations?
There appears to be no way to sort Google Scholar search results by any field.
How do I count citations in Google Scholar?
Click on the Search Scholar button. Locate the correct article in the search results list. If the article was cited by others, you will see a “Cited by” link at the bottom of the record. Click this link to view who has cited this item.
How do you find most cited?
Find the Most Highly Cited Papers for a Journal Click “Search.” On the results page, change the “Sort by” box (upper right of the list) to “Times Cited-Highest to Lowest”; the articles that then appear at the top of the list are the journal’s most cited.
Where can I find a citation in Google Scholar?
Google scholar provides citations for articles from the search result list ((currently MLA, APA, Chicago, Harvard or Vancouver). To grab a citation click on the Cite link below a search result and select from the available citation styles.
When did Google Scholar start using citation metrics?
In November, 2011, Google Scholar added a new option called Google Scholar Citations. Authors can use this service to compute citation metrics and track them over time. The same caveats that apply to citation searching in Google Scholar apply to Google Scholar Citations so check the information in the previous box to learn about those.
What are the benefits of using Google Scholar?
Google Scholar has both benefits and limitations when it comes to citation analysis. It will most likely offers a higher number of documents which have cited a work. It offers a almost unlimited universe of content. Whatever has been cited by another work on the web and can be collected by Google will be in Google Scholar.
What should be included in the Times cited list?
Anything cited by another article, whether scholarly or not will be included in the times cited list. This can include blog posts, syllabi or anything else mentioned in a scholarly article.