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      Credit where credit’s due: accounting for co-authorship in citation counts

      research-article
        1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ,
      Scientometrics
      Springer Netherlands
      Citations, Co-authors, Pareto distribution
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          Abstract

          I propose a new method (Pareto weights) to objectively attribute citations to co-authors. Previous methods either profess ignorance about the seniority of co-authors (egalitarian weights) or are based in an ad hoc way on the order of authors (rank weights). Pareto weights are based on the respective citation records of the co-authors. Pareto weights are proportional to the probability of observing the number of citations obtained. Assuming a Pareto distribution, such weights can be computed with a simple, closed-form equation but require a few iterations and data on a scholar, her co-authors, and her co-authors’ co-authors. The use of Pareto weights is illustrated with a group of prominent economists. In this case, Pareto weights are very different from rank weights. Pareto weights are more similar to egalitarian weights but can deviate up to a quarter in either direction (for reasons that are intuitive).

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          Most cited references15

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          Is Open Access

          An index to quantify an individual's scientific research valid across disciplines

          , , (2010)
          The number h of papers with at least h citations has been proposed to evaluate individual's scientific research production. This index is robust in several ways but yet strongly dependent on the research field. We propose a complementary index hI = h^2/N_t, with N_t being the total number of authors in the considered h papers. A researcher with index hI has hI papers with at least hI citation if he/she had published alone. We have obtained the rank plots of h and hI for four Brazilian scientific communities. Contrasting to the h-index curve, the hI index present a perfect data collapse into a unique allowing comparison among different research areas.
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            Quantifying coauthor contributions.

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              A modification of the h-index: The hm-index accounts for multi-authored manuscripts

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                richard.tol@esri.ie
                Journal
                Scientometrics
                Scientometrics
                Springer Netherlands (Dordrecht )
                0138-9130
                1588-2861
                16 July 2011
                16 July 2011
                October 2011
                : 89
                : 1
                : 291-299
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Economic and Social Research Institute, Dublin, Ireland
                [2 ]Institute for Environmental Studies, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
                [3 ]Department of Spatial Economics, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
                [4 ]Department of Economics, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland
                Article
                451
                10.1007/s11192-011-0451-5
                3171670
                21957320
                5ebea296-284a-4cc2-a92d-003918743cd0
                © The Author(s) 2011
                History
                : 9 May 2011
                Categories
                Article
                Custom metadata
                © Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, Hungary 2011

                Computer science
                pareto distribution,citations,co-authors
                Computer science
                pareto distribution, citations, co-authors

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