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JCDL
2010
ACM

Citing for high impact

13 years 8 months ago
Citing for high impact
The question of citation behavior has always intrigued scientists from various disciplines. While general citation patterns have been widely studied in the literature we develop the notion of citation projection graphs by investigating the citations among the publications that a given paper cites. We investigate how patterns of citations vary between various scientific disciplines and how such patterns reflect the scientific impact of the paper. We find that idiosyncratic citation patterns are characteristic for low impact papers; while narrow, discipline-focused citation patterns are common for medium impact papers. Our results show that crossingcommunity, or bridging citation patters are high risk and high reward since such patterns are characteristic for both low and high impact papers. Last, we observe that recently citation networks are trending toward more bridging and interdisciplinary forms. Categories and Subject Descriptors H.3.7 [Information Storage and Retrieval]: Digi...
Xiaolin Shi, Jure Leskovec, Daniel A. McFarland
Added 02 Aug 2010
Updated 02 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 2010
Where JCDL
Authors Xiaolin Shi, Jure Leskovec, Daniel A. McFarland
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