If you look at your GS profile, you get a list of papers with citation numbers. The graphic shows citation #s by year. Is there a simple way to see who has recently cited what work? 🤔
To make a Google scholar account, you must have Gmail.
Simply activate the notifications when you get cited and each time you get cited, you will receive an email by which articles cited you.
Open your Google Scholar profile while you are opening your Gmail. Beside your name, you will find a "Follow" button. Activate notify me with new citations box and you will have this function.
If I open e.g. the first listed paper, then it gives 46 citations. I then have to open it (as you suggest), then select e.g. 'Since 2018' on the left side, to show me this years citations. I have to repeat this for all of the listed papers to see the latest citations.
The chart on the right will show me how many citations I have had this year, but if I want to know which papers (and who said what), then I have to do this manually. I was hoping there was some easier way to check how my work is being used ....
Unfortunately, the function you describe in the message above is not supported in google scholar, you'd better try researcher ID Thomson Reuters, web of scence is much more appropriate for customized analytic tools
PS: have you tried following your own citation list updates via GS email selfinforming tool?
The database that enables finding the whole data (citations, publications and indicators) of GS is Publish or Perish (POP) database that can be downloaded for free from the net. This database relies on GS data, and it has search options by various fields (author, subject, keywords etc'.)
Hi Avishag: I use PoP for data analysis, but I am not so much interested now in performance indicators. I was after a simple way of seeing GS citations grouped by date, so I can go instantly to the source & see how they used the work. I find GS quite accurate, but when you notice your overall citation # is up, it is not so easy to see which paper has been most recently used.
How about following the additional papers by most recent date ? It could be difficult, though, if you have hundreds citations to your paper. In GS on the right side you have an option to limit the search by date range. You could use it but this must be done for each publication separately. So, probably it does not answer your question.
To make a Google scholar account, you must have Gmail.
Simply activate the notifications when you get cited and each time you get cited, you will receive an email by which articles cited you.
Open your Google Scholar profile while you are opening your Gmail. Beside your name, you will find a "Follow" button. Activate notify me with new citations box and you will have this function.
Abdelrahman: thanks for this really simple answer - I have had GS for a long time, but never seen the 'Follow' box beside my name! The boxes are now ticked, so hopefully I will get an alert for each new citing & see straight away where they are from. Thank you very much for what must have seemed such an obvious answer ;-)
If you have given your mail in GS , then you get citation alert. That is I think an easy way to know the recent citations to your paper. Otherwise there are software 's like PoP used for analysis.