articleBiomedical Digital LibrariesJun 29, 2006HYBRID OA

Three options for citation tracking: Google Scholar, Scopus and Web of Science

Yale University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

Researchers turn to citation tracking to find the most influential articles for a particular topic and to see how often their own published papers are cited. For years researchers looking for this type of information had only one resource to consult: the Web of Science from Thomson Scientific. In 2004 two competitors emerged--Scopus from Elsevier and Google Scholar from Google. The research reported here uses citation analysis in an observational study examining these three databases; comparing citation counts for articles from two disciplines (oncology and condensed matter physics) and two years (1993 and 2003) to test the hypothesis that the different scholarly publication coverage provided by the three search tools will lead to different citation counts from each.

Methods

Eleven journal titles with varying impact factors were selected from each discipline (oncology and condensed matter physics) using the Journal Citation Reports (JCR). All articles published in the selected titles were retrieved for the years 1993 and 2003, and a stratified random sample of articles was chosen, resulting in four sets of articles. During the week of November 7-12, 2005, the citation counts for each research article were extracted from the three sources. The actual citing references for a subset of the articles published in 2003 were also gathered from each of the three sources.

Citation impact

759
total citations
FWCI
33.80
Percentile
100%
References
30
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Citation
  • Scopus
  • Web of science
  • Citation analysis
  • Impact factor
  • Library science
  • Computer science
  • World Wide Web
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Quality Education
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