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  2. How to search for articles from a specific journal in Google...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/102122

    This is, if you try to use Google Scholar's Advanced Search feature, then search for content from "Science", it'll convert it into with with the qualifier source:Science. The problem presented in the question is that this returns hits from sources that have " Science " in their name rather than just the actual journal called " Science ".

  3. How to search in Google Scholar within a particular conference?

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/79949/how-to-search-in-google-scholar...

    Using Google's search operators, guide, we can restrict our search to that of a particular web domain, eg: site:twitter.com Paul Daniels. Within Google Scholar, can we perform a similar in nature search but for articles within a particular conference (or journal)?

  4. publications - How does Google Scholar rank search results? -...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/139543

    7. Here is what the about page says: Google Scholar aims to rank documents the way researchers do, weighing the full text of each document, where it was published, who it was written by, as well as how often and how recently it has been cited in other scholarly literature. Here is an academic article that attempted to deconstruct the ranking ...

  5. reference managers - How to search for a paper when you have...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/87951

    Put it in to Google Scholar. In general, Google scholar is very good. You can copy a full reference into Google Scholar and it will often return just the article you are looking for. In general, this works well, for example, you can copy and paste the reference from a journal article into the Google Scholar search box and get the article.

  6. How long does it usually take for published articles to show up...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/93764/how-long-does-it-usually-take-for...

    Edit: the article in question went for over six months after being published (in a well-regarded Springer journal with its own Wikipedia page) without appearing on Google Scholar, until it received a citation, at which point it was added to Google Scholar almost immediately. One more motivation to write papers that get cited.

  7. Can I reliably determine the quality of a journal by checking...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/12100/can-i-reliably-determine-the-quality...

    The journal provides acceptance notification within 15 days. This raised red flags, but then I performed a Scholar Search for thesai.org and seems that most of their papers have decent citations. So, how reliable is scholar search when evaluating the quality of a journal or how to interpret the results from scholar search ?

  8. How can I add a DOI or link to my article on Google Scholar?

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/96328/how-can-i-add-a-doi-or-link-to-my...

    The link will be found by google's crawlers (during their regular site checking crawlers), and then - hopefully - google's algorithms will add the link to the pdf on google scholar. – Mark Commented Sep 21, 2017 at 20:17

  9. Google Scholar - Add article manually and merge?

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/171452/google-scholar-add-article...

    You can manually add an article to Google Scholar. To add publications, click on the + button and select from the list of the following options: c) Add article manually: If the article cannot be found you can create an entry manually. First choose the publication type at the top of the form then fill in as many fields as possible.

  10. arxiv - Published paper not showing up on google scholar -...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/80698

    16. In a blog post, Claus Wilke describes a bug with Google Scholar where it does not update pre-prints once the article has been publsheed. He notes that: The bug exists. The Scholar team is aware of it. They don’t know how to fix it. They don’t think it’s a particularly pressing problem. For any given paper, the problem will go away ...

  11. How to identify the publications that cite two specific papers?

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/92890/how-to-identify-the-publications...

    Look up article A in Google Scholar. Click the link for articles that cite that article A. Check "Search within citing articles" Type the details of article B in the search bar (e.g. authors or title) Explore the results; This is not as systematic as would be ideal, but should help to give a first-cut idea.