This paper applies the Ijiri-Simon test for systematic deviations from Gibrat's law to citation numbers of economists. It is found that often-cited researchers attract new citation numbers that are disproportionate to the quality of their work. It is also found that this Matthew effect is stronger for economists who started their academic career earlier
This paper studies the citation decision of a scientific author. When an author can make his argumen...
The Matthew effect refers to the adage written some two-thousand years ago in the Gospel of St. Matt...
Papers published in finance and economics journals whose first authors are famous have more citation...
The Matthew effect has that recognition is bestowed on researchers of already high repute. If recogn...
The Matthew effect has that recognition is bestowed on researchers of already high repute. If recogn...
The Matthew effect has that often-cited papers/authors are cited more often. I use the statistical t...
Since the publication of Robert K. Merton’s theory of cumulative advantage in science (Matthew Effe...
One problem confronting the use of citation-based metrics in science studies and research evaluation...
Since the publication of Robert K. Merton’s theory of cumulative advantage in science (Matthew Effec...
A partial view of the Matthew effect in science asserts that the (already) most recognized scientist...
Thanks to a unique individual dataset of French academics in economics, we explain individual public...
Thanks to a unique individual dataset of French academics in economics, we explain individual public...
Sociologists of science noticed that the results of many collaborative projects and discoveries are ...
The observation that a socioeconomic agent with a high reputation gets a disproportionately higher r...
We consider the "Matthew effect" in the citation process which leads to reallocation (or misallocati...
This paper studies the citation decision of a scientific author. When an author can make his argumen...
The Matthew effect refers to the adage written some two-thousand years ago in the Gospel of St. Matt...
Papers published in finance and economics journals whose first authors are famous have more citation...
The Matthew effect has that recognition is bestowed on researchers of already high repute. If recogn...
The Matthew effect has that recognition is bestowed on researchers of already high repute. If recogn...
The Matthew effect has that often-cited papers/authors are cited more often. I use the statistical t...
Since the publication of Robert K. Merton’s theory of cumulative advantage in science (Matthew Effe...
One problem confronting the use of citation-based metrics in science studies and research evaluation...
Since the publication of Robert K. Merton’s theory of cumulative advantage in science (Matthew Effec...
A partial view of the Matthew effect in science asserts that the (already) most recognized scientist...
Thanks to a unique individual dataset of French academics in economics, we explain individual public...
Thanks to a unique individual dataset of French academics in economics, we explain individual public...
Sociologists of science noticed that the results of many collaborative projects and discoveries are ...
The observation that a socioeconomic agent with a high reputation gets a disproportionately higher r...
We consider the "Matthew effect" in the citation process which leads to reallocation (or misallocati...
This paper studies the citation decision of a scientific author. When an author can make his argumen...
The Matthew effect refers to the adage written some two-thousand years ago in the Gospel of St. Matt...
Papers published in finance and economics journals whose first authors are famous have more citation...