© 2016 The British Psychological Society We study cross-cultural differences in self-promotion by comparing the self-citation behaviour of scholarly authors originating from individualist and collectivist cultures, using original data on 1,346 journal articles published between 2009 and 2014 in the fields of Management and Business. Our main finding is that articles by authors from individualist cultures are about twice as likely to contain many self-citations. Our results confirm the presence of a gender gap in self-citations, but we show that this effect is smaller than the cultural effect and that the effect appears to be stable across cultures. These findings show that the structure of rewards and costs associated with particular self-p...
In earlier studies by the authors, basic regularities of author self-citations have been analysed. T...
Self-citation patterns of 1,104 journals indexed in the 2018 edition of the Journal Citation Reports...
Psychological differences between women and men, far from being invariant as a biological explanatio...
How common is self-citation in scholarly publication, and does the practice vary by gender? Using no...
It was recently reported that men self-cite >50% more often than women across a wide variety of disc...
It was recently reported that men self-cite >50% more often than women across a wide variety of disc...
This study explores gender gaps and differences in citation practices of scholars in the top-cited a...
Unmerited authorship is a practice common to many countries around the world, but are there systemat...
In a recent paper the authors have studied the role of author self-citations within the process of d...
With the recent growth in popularity of multisource (360-degree) feedback programs, which typically ...
This study examined cross-cultural sex and gender differences in achievement motivation. In contrast...
In earlier studies by the authors, basic regularities of author self-citations have been analysed. T...
Self-citations are a familiar, if sometimes controversial, element of academic knowledge constructio...
Psychological differences between women and men, far from being invariant as a biological explanatio...
The research contributes two ideas to knowledge about culture and culture\u27s influence on advertis...
In earlier studies by the authors, basic regularities of author self-citations have been analysed. T...
Self-citation patterns of 1,104 journals indexed in the 2018 edition of the Journal Citation Reports...
Psychological differences between women and men, far from being invariant as a biological explanatio...
How common is self-citation in scholarly publication, and does the practice vary by gender? Using no...
It was recently reported that men self-cite >50% more often than women across a wide variety of disc...
It was recently reported that men self-cite >50% more often than women across a wide variety of disc...
This study explores gender gaps and differences in citation practices of scholars in the top-cited a...
Unmerited authorship is a practice common to many countries around the world, but are there systemat...
In a recent paper the authors have studied the role of author self-citations within the process of d...
With the recent growth in popularity of multisource (360-degree) feedback programs, which typically ...
This study examined cross-cultural sex and gender differences in achievement motivation. In contrast...
In earlier studies by the authors, basic regularities of author self-citations have been analysed. T...
Self-citations are a familiar, if sometimes controversial, element of academic knowledge constructio...
Psychological differences between women and men, far from being invariant as a biological explanatio...
The research contributes two ideas to knowledge about culture and culture\u27s influence on advertis...
In earlier studies by the authors, basic regularities of author self-citations have been analysed. T...
Self-citation patterns of 1,104 journals indexed in the 2018 edition of the Journal Citation Reports...
Psychological differences between women and men, far from being invariant as a biological explanatio...