[EN] Despite citation counts from Google Scholar (GS), Web of Science (WoS), and Scopus being widely consulted by researchers and sometimes used in research evaluations, there is no recent or systematic evidence about the differences between them. In response, this paper investigates 2,448,055 citations to 2299 English-language highly-cited documents from 252 GS subject categories published in 2006, comparing GS, the WoS Core Collection, and Scopus. GS consistently found the largest percentage of citations across all areas (93%¿96%), far ahead of Scopus (35%¿77%) and WoS (27%¿73%). GS found nearly all the WoS (95%) and Scopus (92%) citations. Most citations found only by GS were from non-journal sources (48%¿65%), including theses, books, c...
Web of Science (WoS) and Google Scholar (GS) are prominent citation services with distinct indexing ...
Researchers use different resources to trace the research done in their field of interest and to fin...
M.PhilCiting is the process by which scholars give recognition to research used by another academic ...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Elsevier in Journal of Informetrics on 05/...
Despite citation counts from Google Scholar (GS), Web of Science (WoS), and Scopus being widely cons...
This study explores the extent to which bibliometric indicators based on counts of highly-cited docu...
The Institute for Scientific Information's (ISI) citation databases have been used for decades as a ...
A sample of 1,483 publications, representative of the scholarly production of LIS faculty, was searc...
Google Scholar (GS) is a freely-accessible academic search engine that indexes academic literature f...
(This is a thesis by compilation of studies. Article co-authors are listed at the beginning of each ...
Nowadays, three most popular citation databases are Web of Science (WoS), Scopus and Google Scholar ...
Citation analysis has been used since the mid-20th century as a tool to measure impact and visibilit...
Background: Researchers turn to citation tracking to find the most influential articles for a parti...
Citation analysis has been used since the mid-20th century as a tool to measure impact and visibilit...
Background and aim: Citation is the most important scientific elements and assessment index among re...
Web of Science (WoS) and Google Scholar (GS) are prominent citation services with distinct indexing ...
Researchers use different resources to trace the research done in their field of interest and to fin...
M.PhilCiting is the process by which scholars give recognition to research used by another academic ...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Elsevier in Journal of Informetrics on 05/...
Despite citation counts from Google Scholar (GS), Web of Science (WoS), and Scopus being widely cons...
This study explores the extent to which bibliometric indicators based on counts of highly-cited docu...
The Institute for Scientific Information's (ISI) citation databases have been used for decades as a ...
A sample of 1,483 publications, representative of the scholarly production of LIS faculty, was searc...
Google Scholar (GS) is a freely-accessible academic search engine that indexes academic literature f...
(This is a thesis by compilation of studies. Article co-authors are listed at the beginning of each ...
Nowadays, three most popular citation databases are Web of Science (WoS), Scopus and Google Scholar ...
Citation analysis has been used since the mid-20th century as a tool to measure impact and visibilit...
Background: Researchers turn to citation tracking to find the most influential articles for a parti...
Citation analysis has been used since the mid-20th century as a tool to measure impact and visibilit...
Background and aim: Citation is the most important scientific elements and assessment index among re...
Web of Science (WoS) and Google Scholar (GS) are prominent citation services with distinct indexing ...
Researchers use different resources to trace the research done in their field of interest and to fin...
M.PhilCiting is the process by which scholars give recognition to research used by another academic ...