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The impact of self-citation

Cortex, 2010
Citation rates are used to calculate journal impact factors and for measuring the personal impact of individual scientists (Aksnes, 2003; Fowler and Aksnes, 2007), which can affect chances of academic appointments, advance in career, pay increases and grant funding (Hyland, 2003; Adler, 2009).
Jennifer A, Foley, Sergio, Della Sala
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Does self-citation pay?

Scientometrics, 2007
Self-citations — those where authors cite their own works — account for a significant portion of all citations. These self-references may result from the cumulative nature of individual research, the need for personal gratification, or the value of self-citation as a rhetorical and tactical tool in the struggle for visibility and scientific authority ...
James H. Fowler, Dag W. Aksnes
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Artifactual Increase in Journal Self-Citation

Anesthesia & Analgesia, 2011
After submission of a manuscript to a peer-reviewed anesthesia journal, several authors were asked to cite additional references from the journal to which they submitted. We hypothesized that there were differences among the anesthesiology journals in both the total number of self-citations and the proportion of self-citations to the total number of ...
Patrick, Tighe   +3 more
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“Eigenlob”: self‐citation in biomedical journals

The FASEB Journal, 2006
The number of citations to previous work of an individual scientist has been considered, in part, to be an important indicator of academic performance in research. Some of these citations, of course, are to the author’s own work; the Germans call this “Eigenlob,” or self-praise.
Matthew E, Falagas, Panorea, Kavvadia
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The weight of author self-citations. A fractional approach to self-citation counting

Scientometrics, 2006
The discussion about how to treat author self-citations driven by policy application and quality measurement intensified in the last years. The definition introduced by Snyder and Bonzi has - in lack of any reasonable alternative - been used in bibliometric practice for science policy purposes.
András Schubert   +2 more
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Revision and Self-Citation

2018
Despite recent claims that serious poetic revision only started during the modernist period, most Romantic-period manuscripts yield evidence of sustained and sometimes obsessive revision, which could take place over a matter of hours, days, or years.
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A generalized view of self-citation: Direct, co-author, collaborative, and coercive induced self-citation

Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 2015
The phenomenon of self-citation can present in many different forms, including direct, co-author, collaborative, and coercive induced self-citation. It can also pertain to the citation of single scientists, groups of scientists, journals, and institutions. This article presents some case studies of extreme self-citation practices. It also discusses the
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SELF‐CITATIONS IN SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE

Journal of Documentation, 1977
The purpose of the present investigation was to determine to what extent authors of scientific articles cite their previous publications and what are the principal distinguishing features of this particular type of citation. We have analysed the bibliographies of a group of articles from the areas of plant physiology and neurobiology, and have examined
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A macro study of self-citation

Scientometrics, 2003
This study investigates the role of self-citation in the scientific production of Norway (1981-1996). More than 45,000 publications have been analysed. Using a three-year citation window we find that 36% of all citations represent author self-citations. However, this percentage is decreasing when citations are traced for longer periods.
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Self-citation practices in applied linguistics

Journal of Second Language Studies
Abstract Like other questionable research practices (QRPs) discussed in this issue, self-citation can range from fitting and appropriate to self-serving and unethical ( Ioannidis, 2015 ).
Luke Plonsky, Ekaterina Sudina
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