A stylised fact in bibliometric research is that in the field of management studies, half or more of the papers published are never cited. If true, this implies that efforts and resources are considerably wasted because half of the academic work is not considered worthy by the same community that developed them. We studied a sample of 2777 papers published in 20 journals and representing different levels of quality. Of these, only 191 papers, representing 6.5% of the sample, were never cited, suggesting that the aforementioned stylised fact is a myth. We identified the factors that contribute to the level of citations, including the ranking of the journal in the quality list, time since last citation, and number of authors. The implications...
The effect of climate change on business is likely to be substantial. It might be expected, therefor...
A Kuhnian approach to research assessment requires us to consider that the important scientific brea...
Why do some articles become building blocks for future scholars, whereas others remain unnoticed? Th...
A stylised fact in bibliometric research is that in the field of management studies, half or more of...
It is widely accepted that academic papers are rarely cited or even read. But what kind of data lies...
We address the question of the visibility of management research for practitioners by measuring scie...
Citations to research articles in other research articles are increasingly used as a metric for asse...
Citation rates are becoming increasingly important in judging the research quality of journals, inst...
We argue that the creation of new knowledge is both difficult and rare. More specifically, we posit ...
Two propositions are examined with reference to the top 300 papers in economics journals in terms of...
Academic publications are too often ignored by other researchers. There are various reasons: Researc...
Academic publications are too often ignored by other researchers. There are various reasons: Researc...
"The number of journal articles published has climbed from 13,000 50 years ago to 72,000 today, even...
In universities all over the world, hiring and promotion committees regularly hear the argument: “th...
Why do some articles become building blocks for future scholars, whereas others remain unnoticed? Th...
The effect of climate change on business is likely to be substantial. It might be expected, therefor...
A Kuhnian approach to research assessment requires us to consider that the important scientific brea...
Why do some articles become building blocks for future scholars, whereas others remain unnoticed? Th...
A stylised fact in bibliometric research is that in the field of management studies, half or more of...
It is widely accepted that academic papers are rarely cited or even read. But what kind of data lies...
We address the question of the visibility of management research for practitioners by measuring scie...
Citations to research articles in other research articles are increasingly used as a metric for asse...
Citation rates are becoming increasingly important in judging the research quality of journals, inst...
We argue that the creation of new knowledge is both difficult and rare. More specifically, we posit ...
Two propositions are examined with reference to the top 300 papers in economics journals in terms of...
Academic publications are too often ignored by other researchers. There are various reasons: Researc...
Academic publications are too often ignored by other researchers. There are various reasons: Researc...
"The number of journal articles published has climbed from 13,000 50 years ago to 72,000 today, even...
In universities all over the world, hiring and promotion committees regularly hear the argument: “th...
Why do some articles become building blocks for future scholars, whereas others remain unnoticed? Th...
The effect of climate change on business is likely to be substantial. It might be expected, therefor...
A Kuhnian approach to research assessment requires us to consider that the important scientific brea...
Why do some articles become building blocks for future scholars, whereas others remain unnoticed? Th...