The distribution of scientific citations for publications selected with different rules (author, topic, institution, country, journal, etc…) collapse on a single curve if one plots the citations relative to their mean value. We find that the distribution of "shares" for the Facebook posts rescale in the same manner to the very same curve with scientific citations. This finding suggests that citations are subjected to the same growth mechanism with Facebook popularity measures, being influenced by a statistically similar social environment and selection mechanism. In a simple master-equation approach the exponential growth of the number of publications and a preferential selection mechanism leads to a Tsallis-Pareto distribution offering an ...
Citations measure the importance of a publication, and may serve as a proxy for its popularity and q...
The presence of web-based communities is a distinctive signature of Web 2.0. The web-based feature m...
We investigate how textual properties of scientific papers relate to the number of citations they re...
<div><div>"Science and Facebook: the same popularity law!" data for figures 1 and 3.</div></div><div...
A number of new metrics based on social media platforms--grouped under the term "altmetrics"--have r...
<div><p>A number of new metrics based on social media platforms—grouped under the term “altmetrics”—...
Most previous studies of Altmetrics focused on the correlation between alt-metric scores and citatio...
<p><em>Data and figures for paper published in PLOS ONE</em></p> <p><strong>Abstract. </strong>A num...
An analysis of article-level metrics of 27,856 PLOS ONE articles reveals that the number of tweets w...
Although more than a million academic papers have been posted on Facebook, there is little detailed ...
<div><p>This paper presents a bibliographic analysis of <i>Nature</i> articles based on altmetrics. ...
A number of new metrics based on social media platforms—grouped under the term “alt-metrics”—have re...
Due to the increasing amount of scientific work and the typical delays in publication, promptly asse...
Based on the decision-theoretical conditions underlying the selection of events for news coverage in...
The presence of web-based communities is a distinctive signature of Web 2.0. The web-based feature m...
Citations measure the importance of a publication, and may serve as a proxy for its popularity and q...
The presence of web-based communities is a distinctive signature of Web 2.0. The web-based feature m...
We investigate how textual properties of scientific papers relate to the number of citations they re...
<div><div>"Science and Facebook: the same popularity law!" data for figures 1 and 3.</div></div><div...
A number of new metrics based on social media platforms--grouped under the term "altmetrics"--have r...
<div><p>A number of new metrics based on social media platforms—grouped under the term “altmetrics”—...
Most previous studies of Altmetrics focused on the correlation between alt-metric scores and citatio...
<p><em>Data and figures for paper published in PLOS ONE</em></p> <p><strong>Abstract. </strong>A num...
An analysis of article-level metrics of 27,856 PLOS ONE articles reveals that the number of tweets w...
Although more than a million academic papers have been posted on Facebook, there is little detailed ...
<div><p>This paper presents a bibliographic analysis of <i>Nature</i> articles based on altmetrics. ...
A number of new metrics based on social media platforms—grouped under the term “alt-metrics”—have re...
Due to the increasing amount of scientific work and the typical delays in publication, promptly asse...
Based on the decision-theoretical conditions underlying the selection of events for news coverage in...
The presence of web-based communities is a distinctive signature of Web 2.0. The web-based feature m...
Citations measure the importance of a publication, and may serve as a proxy for its popularity and q...
The presence of web-based communities is a distinctive signature of Web 2.0. The web-based feature m...
We investigate how textual properties of scientific papers relate to the number of citations they re...