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  2. How can I export my Google Scholar Library as a BibTeX format?

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/24493

    As they say, you: Can extract publication title, main online URL, number of citations, number of online versions, link to Google Scholar's main cluster for the work, and Google Scholar's cluster of all works referencing the publication.

  3. Using google scholar might be another option for you. Since many researcher also have a google scholar profile, you can explore preliminary collaboration patterns and the number of citations. Maybe this helps you a bit to trace back some recent developments and to identify the main scholars in the field.

  4. How to obtain citation counts per year or exportable data from...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/58406/how-to-obtain-citation-counts-per...

    You can do it with scholar package. Follow the steps. 1) Find the article in scholar.google.de 2) Click on one the authors registered in google scholar, this will show the page with all articles of that author 3) Click on the title of the article you want, this will show the profile for the article.

  5. what does [citation] mean in google scholar search results?

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/41562/what-does-citation-mean-in-google...

    12. [Citation] means that Google Scholar has not been able to find a source for the publication, but that it has inferred that it exists because other publications cite it. Taken directly from Google Scholar help "These are articles which other scholarly articles have referred to, but which we haven't found online.

  6. publications - How to correct citations in Google Scholar? -...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/127459

    Such 'stray' citations can be corrected, see Anne-Wil Harzing's guide to correcting stray citations in Google Scholar. Note that the same problem occurs in all citation databases to some extent. Most of them have some mechanism for reporting and correcting (besides Google Scholar, at least Web of Science and Scopus do).

  7. How can I validate a citation that is genuine in google scholar...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/125380/how-can-i-validate-a-citation-that...

    Google Scholar may mark citation counts with an asterisk (*), meaning: This "Cited by" count includes citations to the following articles in Scholar. The ones marked * may be different from the article in the profile. How can I validate citations in my Google Scholar account that are genuine but are marked with a *?

  8. google scholar - How to count non-self citations of articles ...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/160038/how-to-count-non-self-citations-of...

    In Google Scholar, I can view the number of citations of each article, but this includes self-citations. Is there a way to view the number of non-self citations? In this tweet from 2019, the author suggests a way to calculate this number for a specific article. But is there a way to do this automatically for all my articles?

  9. google scholar - Is it possible to bulk-download all citations...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/190937/is-it-possible-to-bulk-download...

    If you are wanting to stick with Google Scholar your best bet is to use a plug-in like Zotero, which will let you quickly capture all the metadata (and potentially readily available .pdf's) of results on a page-by-page basis. If you start pulling too much metadata too quickly from Google Scholar you will trip their bot detection captcha's.

  10. How do I get an email alert when my paper is cited?

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/43982

    17. The top answer mentions setting up a "google scholar citation profile" to get notified automatically when any of your articles are cited. Those instructions may be out of date, so here's how to do it as of June 2018: Go to your own google scholar profile (you probably have to set one up first) Click the blue "Follow" button.

  11. 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.