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1

Gregory, Chase. "(Ex)Citation: Citational Eros in Academic Texts." Diacritics 48, no. 3 (2020): 60–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/dia.2020.0019.

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Leydesdorff, L. "Towards a theory of citation?" Scientometrics 12, no. 5-6 (November 1987): 305–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf02016669.

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Wang, Guihua, and Guangwei Hu. "Citations and the Nature of Cited Sources: A Cross-Disciplinary and Cross-Linguistic Study." SAGE Open 12, no. 2 (April 2022): 215824402210933. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/21582440221093350.

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Extant scholarship on citation has examined a limited number of citational features, adopted disciplinary and ethnolinguistic perspectives disjunctively, and paid little systematic attention to the nature of cited sources. Drawing on appraisal theory, the present study investigated the nature of cited sources, namely personalization (i.e., whether humans are foregrounded as a cited source) and identification (i.e., whether and how the cited sources are identified), to understand their dialogic functionality in knowledge making. We analyzed citations in a corpus of 84 research articles sampled from two disciplines and two languages. Greater citation-based dialogic contraction was found in the medical articles than in the applied linguistic articles, whereas the cross-linguistic contrasts revealed a mixed picture. The differences are explained in terms of divergent epistemologies, cultural beliefs, discursive practices, institutional settings, and co-patterning of different citation features.
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Wang, Guihua, and Guangwei Hu. "Citations and the Nature of Cited Sources: A Cross-Disciplinary and Cross-Linguistic Study." SAGE Open 12, no. 2 (April 2022): 215824402210933. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/21582440221093350.

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Extant scholarship on citation has examined a limited number of citational features, adopted disciplinary and ethnolinguistic perspectives disjunctively, and paid little systematic attention to the nature of cited sources. Drawing on appraisal theory, the present study investigated the nature of cited sources, namely personalization (i.e., whether humans are foregrounded as a cited source) and identification (i.e., whether and how the cited sources are identified), to understand their dialogic functionality in knowledge making. We analyzed citations in a corpus of 84 research articles sampled from two disciplines and two languages. Greater citation-based dialogic contraction was found in the medical articles than in the applied linguistic articles, whereas the cross-linguistic contrasts revealed a mixed picture. The differences are explained in terms of divergent epistemologies, cultural beliefs, discursive practices, institutional settings, and co-patterning of different citation features.
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Krogstad, Jack L., and Gerald Smith. "Assessing the Influence of Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory: 1985–2000." AUDITING: A Journal of Practice & Theory 22, no. 1 (March 1, 2003): 195–204. http://dx.doi.org/10.2308/aud.2003.22.1.195.

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This study utilizes citation analysis to explore the impact and standing of Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory (AJPT) both within the accounting/auditing discipline and in the context of related fields. More specifically, the citations to AJPT from other journals included in the Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI), plus citations appearing in additional, high-quality accounting/auditing journals (not included in the SSCI) are combined with self-citations to yield a database of 3,102 citations for the period 1985 through 2000. This database is analyzed to observe trends and to identify journals citing AJPT most frequently. Additionally, articles and authors cited most widely are enumerated. AJPT's growing influence and stature are documented, and the results support the conclusion that the Auditing Section's journal has continued to adhere to its essential objective of promoting communication between auditing research and practice.
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Nederhof, A. J., and A. F. J. Van Raan. "Citation theory and the Ortega hypothesis." Scientometrics 12, no. 5-6 (November 1987): 325–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf02016674.

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Silvello, Gianmaria. "Theory and practice of data citation." Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology 69, no. 1 (September 19, 2017): 6–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/asi.23917.

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Kim, Yongsoo. "Topology of Literary Theory: A Citation Network Analysis of The Journal of Criticism and Theory (1996-2015)." Criticism and Theory Society of Korea 27, no. 1 (February 28, 2022): 57–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.19116/theory.2022.27.1.57.

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Nowrouzi, Behdin, Christine Nguyen, Jennifer Casole, and Behnam Nowrouzi-Kia. "Occupational Stress: A Comprehensive Review of the Top 50 Annual and Lifetime Cited Articles." Workplace Health & Safety 65, no. 5 (October 6, 2016): 197–209. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2165079916666300.

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This study determined the impact and influence of published articles on the field of occupational stress. A transdisciplinary approach was used to identify the 50 work-related stress articles with the most lifetime citations and the 50 work-related stress articles with the highest annual citation rates. Studies were categorized based on their primary focus: (a) etiology, (b) predictor of outcome for which occupational stress is the outcome or predictor of outcome for which occupational stress is an independent variable, (c) management/intervention, (d) theory/model/framework, or (e) methodologies. The majority of studies with the highest number of lifetime citations as well as the highest annual citation rates used stress as a predictor or outcome of another factor. The proportion of studies that were categorized by etiology, intervention/management, theory/model/framework, or methodologies was relatively low for both lifetime and annual citations.
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Angrist, Joshua, Pierre Azoulay, Glenn Ellison, Ryan Hill, and Susan Feng Lu. "Economic Research Evolves: Fields and Styles." American Economic Review 107, no. 5 (May 1, 2017): 293–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1257/aer.p20171117.

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We examine the evolution of economics research using a machine-learning-based classification of publications into fields and styles. The changing field distribution of publications would not seem to favor empirical papers. But economics' empirical shift is a within-field phenomenon; even fields that traditionally emphasize theory have gotten more empirical. Empirical work has also come to be more cited than theoretical work. The citation shift is sharpened when citations are weighted by journal importance. Regression analyses of citations per paper show empirical publications reaching citation parity with theoretical publications around 2000. Within fields and journals, however, empirical work is now cited more.
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Chaudhari, Bhagwan T. "A Citation Analysis of ‘Economic Theory’ Journal." International Journal of Research in Library Science 6, no. 1 (July 6, 2020): 110. http://dx.doi.org/10.26761/ijrls.6.1.2020.1323.

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Egghe, L., and I. K. Ravichandra Rao. "Theory of first-citation distributions and applications." Mathematical and Computer Modelling 34, no. 1-2 (July 2001): 81–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0895-7177(01)00050-4.

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13

Fitzpatrick, Courtney L., Elizabeth A. Hobson, Tamra C. Mendelson, Rafael L. Rodríguez, Rebecca J. Safran, Elizabeth S. C. Scordato, Maria R. Servedio, Caitlin A. Stern, Laurel B. Symes, and Michael Kopp. "Theory Meets Empiry: A Citation Network Analysis." BioScience 68, no. 10 (August 22, 2018): 805–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/biosci/biy083.

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Johnston, David W., Marco Piatti, and Benno Torgler. "Citation success over time: theory or empirics?" Scientometrics 95, no. 3 (November 23, 2012): 1023–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11192-012-0910-7.

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Arunachalam, S. "Citation analysis: Do we need a theory?" Scientometrics 43, no. 1 (September 1998): 141–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf02458402.

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Minzetanu, Andrei. "La citation rumorale." Littératures, no. 76 (August 1, 2017): 173–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/litteratures.1626.

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Bonnett, Piedad, and Yvette Siegert. "Poem with Citation." World Literature Today 96, no. 1 (2022): 15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/wlt.2022.0009.

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Hu, Feng, Lin Ma, Xiu-Xiu Zhan, Yinzuo Zhou, Chuang Liu, Haixing Zhao, and Zi-Ke Zhang. "The aging effect in evolving scientific citation networks." Scientometrics 126, no. 5 (March 12, 2021): 4297–309. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11192-021-03929-8.

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AbstractThe study of citation networks is of interest to the scientific community. However, the underlying mechanism driving individual citation behavior remains imperfectly understood, despite the recent proliferation of quantitative research methods. Traditional network models normally use graph theory to consider articles as nodes and citations as pairwise relationships between them. In this paper, we propose an alternative evolutionary model based on hypergraph theory in which one hyperedge can have an arbitrary number of nodes, combined with an aging effect to reflect the temporal dynamics of scientific citation behavior. Both theoretical approximate solution and simulation analysis of the model are developed and validated using two benchmark datasets from different disciplines, i.e. publications of the American Physical Society (APS) and the Digital Bibliography & Library Project (DBLP). Further analysis indicates that the attraction of early publications will decay exponentially. Moreover, the experimental results show that the aging effect indeed has a significant influence on the description of collective citation patterns. Shedding light on the complex dynamics driving these mechanisms facilitates the understanding of the laws governing scientific evolution and the quantitative evaluation of scientific outputs.
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Yuret, Tolga. "Predicting the impact of American Economic Review articles by author characteristics." Quantitative Science Studies 3, no. 1 (2022): 227–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/qss_a_00180.

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Abstract Authors who publish in American Economic Review (AER) have career paths confined to a few prestigious institutions, and they mostly have exceptional past publication performance. In this paper, I show that authors who are educated and work in the top 10 institutions and have better past publication performance receive more citations for their current AER publications. Authors who have published in the top economic theory journals receive fewer citations even after controlling for the subfield of their AER article. The gender of the authors, years of post-PhD experience, and the location of the affiliated institution do not have any significant effect on the citation performance. An opportunistic editor can exploit the factors that are related to citation performance to substantially improve the citation performance of the journal. Such opportunistic behavior increases the overrepresentation of authors with certain characteristics. For example, an opportunistic editor who uses the predicted citation performance of articles to select a quarter of the articles increases the ratio of authors who works at the top 10 institutions from 30.8% to 52.0%.
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Guffey, Daryl M., and Nancy L. Harp. "The Journal of Management Accounting Research: A Content and Citation Analysis of the First 25 Years." Journal of Management Accounting Research 29, no. 3 (September 1, 2016): 93–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.2308/jmar-51592.

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ABSTRACT This article provides a descriptive content analysis and citation analysis for the Journal of Management Accounting Research (JMAR) between 1989 and 2013. Adopting the Shields (1997) taxonomy of managerial accounting research, we categorize articles published in JMAR by research method, topic, and underlying discipline (theory) and present information on changes in content over time to identify potential trends. We also collect citations to articles in JMAR and use citation metrics to identify which research methods, topics, underlying disciplines, and specific articles have contributed the most toward establishing JMAR as a premier accounting journal. Finally, we interpret content trends in conjunction with citation results to provide insights for the future of JMAR. Most notably, we report that research methods such as Survey, Literature Review, and Field Study are decreasing in prevalence in JMAR over time, yet these are the research methods that have the greatest impact based on citations collected.
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Hassan, Nik Rushdi, and Alexander Serenko. "Patterns of citations for the growth of knowledge: a Foucauldian perspective." Journal of Documentation 75, no. 3 (May 13, 2019): 593–611. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jd-08-2018-0125.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to sensitize researchers to qualitative citation patterns that characterize original research, contribute toward the growth of knowledge and, ultimately, promote scientific progress. Design/methodology/approach This study describes how ideas are intertextually inserted into citing works to create new concepts and theories, thereby contributing to the growth of knowledge. By combining existing perspectives and dimensions of citations with Foucauldian theory, this study develops a typology of qualitative citation patterns for the growth of knowledge and uses examples from two classic works to illustrate how these citation patterns can be identified and applied. Findings A clearer understanding of the motivations behind citations becomes possible by focusing on the qualitative patterns of citations rather than on their quantitative features. The proposed typology includes the following patterns: original, conceptual, organic, juxtapositional, peripheral, persuasive, acknowledgment, perfunctory, inconsistent and plagiaristic. Originality/value In contrast to quantitative evaluations of the role and value of citations, this study focuses on the qualitative characteristics of citations, in the form of specific patterns of citations that engender original and novel research and those that may not. By integrating Foucauldian analysis of discourse with existing theories of citations, this study offers a more nuanced and refined typology of citations that can be used by researchers to gain a deeper semantic understanding of citations.
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Walter, Christian, and Vincent Ribière. "A citation and co-citation analysis of 10 years of KM theory and practices." Knowledge Management Research & Practice 11, no. 3 (August 2013): 221–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/kmrp.2013.25.

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Darmawansah, Darmawansah. "A Bibliometric Mapping of Educational Technology in Indonesia (2011-2020)." Indonesian Scholars Scientific Summit Taiwan Proceeding 3 (July 11, 2021): 8–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.52162/3.2021107.

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This study reveals educational technology research trends in Indonesia for the consecutive ten years (2011-2020). The analysis included co-authorship, co-occurrence, citation, and co-citation by finding the top authors, universities, journals, the most used keywords, and citation variables. The data was taken from the Web of Science. A total of 248 studies were found and then shrunk into 59 studies related to educational technology. The mapping analysis used VOSviewer to visualize the selected studies. It was concluded that the Nurkhamid had the highest numbers of citations, while publications from Yogyakarta State University were declared as the most-cited papers. In terms of the most-cited journals (citation analysis), the Australasian Journal of Educational Technology was named on it, and Computers & Education was the most-cited based on co-citation analysis. Based on the co-occurrence analysis, some of the terms, including education, technology, activity theory, English, and science, were enunciated as the most used keywords in the selected period. Further analysis was discussed herein.
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Kim, Annabel L. "The Politics of Citation." Diacritics 48, no. 3 (2020): 4–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/dia.2020.0016.

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Bal, Mieke, Malek Alloula, Myrna Godzich, Wlad Godzich, Raymond Corbey, and Sander Gilman. "The Politics of Citation." Diacritics 21, no. 1 (1991): 24. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/465209.

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Madani, Farshad, Martin Zwick, and Tugrul Daim. "Keyword-based patent citation prediction via information theory." International Journal of General Systems 47, no. 8 (October 22, 2018): 821–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03081079.2018.1524892.

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O’Connor, Martin, Lynn Farrell, Anita Munnelly, and Louise McHugh. "Citation analysis of relational frame theory: 2009–2016." Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science 6, no. 2 (April 2017): 152–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcbs.2017.04.009.

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Donthu, Naveen, Satish Kumar, Chatura Ranaweera, Marianna Sigala, and Riya Sureka. "Journal of Service Theory and Practice at age 30: past, present and future contributions to service research." Journal of Service Theory and Practice 31, no. 3 (January 29, 2021): 265–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jstp-10-2020-0233.

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PurposeIn 2020, the Journal of Service Theory and Practice (JSTP), previously titled Managing Service Quality, celebrates its 30th anniversary. This study provides a retrospective of the evolution and contribution of the journal to service research by identifying its major trends, research constituents, factors contributing to citations and thematic structure over its 29 active years (1991–2019). The paper concludes by providing directions and ideas for progressing service researchDesign/methodology/approachThe study uses the Scopus database to extract JSTP's bibliographic data. It employs bibliometric methods to study the trends of the journal, such as the citation structure and most-contributing authors, institutions and countries. Bibliographic coupling and keyword co-occurrence analyses are used to study the intellectual structure of the journal. Regression analysis discloses the factors influencing citations of JSTP articles. Factors explaining the citation count of JSTP articles include article age, number of author keywords, article length, title length and number of references.FindingsJSTP's influence has grown significantly in the scientific community, which is evidenced by findings relating to the citation counts, the thematic scope/variety and authorship features of the JSTP papers published during the last 30 years. JSTP attracts publications from around the globe, but most contributions come from the United States, United Kingdom and Australia. Although JSTP has continuously evolved with new and varied themes, a bibliographic coupling analysis clustered JSTP articles into five major clusters.Research limitations/implicationsThe limitations of the Scopus database may impact the study's results.Originality/valueThis study is the first to provide a comprehensive review of JSTP since its launch. It is useful to the editorial board and other JSTP stakeholders as well as service scholars alike.
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Du, San Shan, and Yue Chun Wu. "Research Paper Influence Measurement and Applications: A Machine-Learning-Based Approach." Advanced Materials Research 1049-1050 (October 2014): 2073–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.1049-1050.2073.

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Measuring the influence of academic research publication is an meaningful work in academe. In this paper, the co-author and the citation networks are built to calculate the influence of a researcher and a paper in the way of networks separately with the discussion of further applications. At the beginning, the co-author network is built to determine the influence of co-authors. Then, based on the citations among the papers in the database, we build up the citation network with the help of graph theory. Thirdly, the method is implemented with the application of American Airline network analysis. As the final, the analysis of strengths and weaknesses is conducted.
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Katrovskiy, A. P., and V. E. Shuvalov. "Yulian Glebovich Saushkin: creative heritage and modernity." Regional nye issledovaniya 73, no. 3 (2021): 5–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.5922/1994-5280-2021-3-1.

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The article analyzes the relevance of the publications of Professor Julian GlebovichSaushkin (1911– 1982) in the period from 2000 to 2020 using the national bibliographic database of scientific citation RSCI. The analysis of the general publication activity was carried out, the author’s publications most in demand in the 21st century were identified, and their general characteristics were given. The most in demand are 46 works (45% of the author’s publications presented in the RSCI), which are cited 3 times or more, they account for 98% of the total number of citations. The maximum citation of Saushkin’s publications fell on 6 books (68%), including 5 of them – lifetime. The absolute leader in terms of citation is the fundamental, encyclopedic in content, book «Economic Geography: History, Theory, Methods, Practice», which has not been created in Russian socio-economic geography over the past half century. It was revealed that Yu.G. Saushkin, of course, remains a recognized authority among geographers, primarily in such sections as the history, methodology and theory of geography in general, and socio-economic geography in particular. New trends in geography, reflected in the author’s publications, are still relevant in the 21st century.
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Tierney, Matt. "Dispossessed Citation and Mutual Aid." Diacritics 48, no. 3 (2020): 94–115. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/dia.2020.0021.

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Glynn, Dominic. "Qualitative Research Methods in Translation Theory." SAGE Open 11, no. 3 (July 2021): 215824402110407. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/21582440211040795.

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This article analyses different methodological approaches adopted by theoretical articles published in translation studies journals. To account for the range of perspectives, a small corpus comprising articles from three journals listed in both the Thomson and Reuters Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI) and the Arts and Humanities Citation Index (A&HCI) was studied. The article discusses how the methods used could gain in rigor from being formalized. It begins by defining translation theory before outlining a corpus of articles to be studied. It then moves onto describing and discussing four methodologies to provide recommendations for conducting future research in translation theory.
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Bernet, William, and Shenmeng Xu. "3.71 Citation Analysis of Misinformation Regarding Parental Alienation Theory." Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 61, no. 10 (October 2022): S251. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaac.2022.09.350.

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Burrell, Quentin L. "The individual author’s publication–citation process: theory and practice." Scientometrics 98, no. 1 (April 30, 2013): 725–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11192-013-1018-4.

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Wang (王思豪), Sihao. "Citation of Han Fu in Shijing Exegetical Works." Journal of Chinese Humanities 8, no. 1 (July 8, 2022): 116–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/23521341-12340126.

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Abstract The various rhapsodies or poetic expositions of the Han dynasty known as Han fu are replete with passages from the classic Chinese poetry collection the Shijing, or Book of Poetry. The reverse is also true: Shijing scholarship has likewise cited Han fu in many of its exegetical works. As a result, the various editions of the Han fu are important sources in the study of the Confucian classics, a discipline commonly known in Chinese as jingxue. The classical citations of the Shijing throughout the Han fu can be placed into one of two categories: “language citation” and “meaning citation”, while the “ironic citation” of Han fu in exegeses of the Shijing that is prevalent in the interpretative system of the Confucian classics can be further broken down into three types: “meaning and principle”, “verification and justification” and “language and exposition”. In the meaning-based citations of the Shijing by the Han fu – especially those of “persuasive remonstrance” and “hymns and eulogies” – the conveyed messages were ironically cited by later generations of interpreters of Confucian classics, which helped form new meanings and principles. The main themes, subject matter, emotional expression and language style of Han fu are lifted heavily from the Shijing. Later generations of Confucian scholars then cited text from the Han fu, thereby constructing new forms of language and exposition. The unique characteristics of fu to “describe things and express themselves clearly” and reference a wide range of “names and things” were used by later Confucian scholars who sought to better understand a whole host of signifiers referred to in the classic texts, from herbs, trees and birds, to beasts, insects and fish. Meanwhile, the perception of fu as knowledge-laden texts inspired Confucian scholars to carry out textual research on them. Scholarly comparisons in premodern China between the Shijing as a Confucian classic, the Shijing as a literary corpus, and Han fu developed during a process of ordinary citation and ironic citation. This resulted in the practice of “complementary citations” of meaning and principle, verification and justification, and language and exposition. A scholarship cycle was thus formed in which the classics were used to revere the fu, then the classics were used to enrich the fu, and interpretations of the fu started to be used to transmit canonical messages. It was a cycle that was imbued with a cross-permeation of neo-Confucian, historical and literary dimensions, eventually resulting in the construction of a new interpretative system for premodern Chinese scholarship of classic texts.
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Filhol, Emmanuel. "Lepouvoir de la citation." Neophilologus 76, no. 2 (April 1992): 161–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf00210165.

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Rodriguez-Esteban, Raul. "Semantic persistence of ambiguous biomedical names in the citation network." Bioinformatics 36, no. 7 (December 12, 2019): 2224–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btz923.

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Abstract Motivation Name ambiguity has long been a central problem in biomedical text mining. To tackle it, it has been usually assumed that names present only one meaning within a given text. It is not known whether this assumption applies beyond the scope of single documents. Results Using a new method that leverages large numbers of biomedical annotations and normalized citations, this study shows that ambiguous biomedical names mentioned in scientific articles tend to present the same meaning in articles that cite them or that they cite, and, to a lesser extent, two steps away in the citation network. Citations, therefore, can be regarded as semantic connections between articles and the citation network should be considered for tasks such as automatic name disambiguation, entity linking and biomedical database annotation. A simple experiment shows the applicability of these findings to name disambiguation. Availability and implementation The code used for this analysis is available at: https://github.com/raroes/one-sense-per-citation-network.
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Lemken, Russell K., and Marc H. Anderson. "Tracing the influence of James March’s most cited works: an empirical approach using historical analysis of co-citation contexts." Journal of Management History 28, no. 1 (November 1, 2021): 107–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jmh-01-2021-0009.

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Purpose The purpose of this study is to examine the historical continuity of James March’s contributions to management scholarship by tracing the co-citations that appear within the textual contexts of articles in premier management journals that cite both March and Simon’s 1958 book Organizations and other works co-authored by March. Design/methodology/approach This study uses within-citation context analysis to examine 522 passages from eight premier management journals that contain co-citations to Organizations and any another work co-authored by March. This entails coding the citing passages to identify the specific knowledge claims from March’s works and how citing authors used them, which establishes linkages between the content in different works of March’s works as used by citing authors. Findings This study finds that 31 other works by March are co-cited within the same citation contexts along with Organizations. The vast majority (71%) of these co-citations of March’s later works are to Cyert and March’s A Behavioral Theory of the Firm. The four other most highly co-cited works are Levitt and March (1988); March (1991); Cohen et al. (1972); and Levinthal and March (1993). Of the eight summary codes used in the analysis corresponding with the contents of Organizations, two summary codes – “Routines and Programs” and “Cognitive Limits” – accounted for the clear majority (60.1%) of all co-citation contexts in this study. Research limitations/implications This study only examined the co-citations to Organizations in eight premier journals in organization studies, and a larger selection of journals might have altered the results to some degree. A truly comprehensive analysis might consider every citation context in the published literature where citing authors jointly mention any two or more of March’s works. Given the extraordinarily large number of citations to March’s works, this was impractical and unfeasible. Practical implications A time-bound and rigorous review of co-citations in common contexts allows both scholars and practitioners to recognize the genuine threads of theory presented by leading scholars and trace them through subsequent works to see how theories have evolved both in practice – reflected in empirical work – and in conception – reflected in theoretical development. Social implications Prior research into citation methodology has shown the proliferation of references over time. It is not uncommon for contemporary works to list 100 or more references for a single paper. This research encourages and facilitates a greater discipline in understanding and using citations by tracing the roots of citations and the extent of their importance in citing works. Originality/value This paper presents an historical perspective of the influence of James March’s body of scholarship by tracking within context co-citations that link a seminal early work of March to his most cited works in premier journals. This study tracks specific knowledge claims that have persisted throughout March’s corpus of scholarship. This historical method is a systematic approach to tracing how subsequent scholarship ties together and uses multiple works to support specific knowledge claims, enabling an objective analysis of the commonalities among a scholar’s works over time. This is the first example of research using this bibliographic method to form an historical perspective of a seminal author or a classic work.
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Bagby, R. Michael, James D. A. Parker, and Alison S. Bury. "A Comparative Citation Analysis of Attribution Theory and the Theory of Cognitive Dissonance." Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 16, no. 2 (June 1990): 274–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0146167290162008.

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40

Lis, Andrzej, and Mateusz Tomanek. "Mapping the intellectual and conceptual structure of physical education research: Direct citation analysis." Physical education of students 25, no. 2 (April 30, 2021): 67–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.15561/20755279.2021.0201.

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Background and Study Aim. The aim of the study is to identify and explore the intellectual and conceptual structure of physical education research. It is focused around the following study questions: (1) What are the most influential publications within the research field? (2) What are the research fronts in physical education studies? Material and Methods. As a result of the research sampling process, the 10,334 publications indexed in the Scopus database were selected by the title search for the phrase ‘physical education’. Citation analysis, one of science mapping methods, was employed to conduct the analysis. The study process and the visualization of its findings were supported by the VOSviewer software. In the process of citation analysis, we used the following weight attributes: (1) custom weight attributes: the number of citations received by a document and the normalized of citations for a document, and (2) standard weight attributes: the number of citation links. Results. Firstly, the most prominent references have been pointed out and discussed. The study of the effects of the SPARK physical education program in regard to physical activity of elementary school pupils by Sallis et al. (1997) is found to be the most cited publication in the physical education research field. The systematic literature review and meta-analysis of research on application of self-determination theory in the physical education context by Vasconellos et al. (2020) is recognized as the publication of the highest value of the normalized number of citations. The application of self-determination theory of motivation in physical education is the topic attracting a lot of attention of the top cited publications in the field. The prominent and central position of these references is confirmed by the analysis of citation links. Secondly, the following research fronts in physical education studies have been identified: (1) motivation in physical education, (2) physical education programmes, (3) development of physical education, (4) self-determination in physical education, (5) physical education and students’ academic achievement, (6) support of physical activity autonomy, (7) gender and physical education, and (8) long-term effects of physical education. Combining the research fronts identified with co-word analysis and direct citation analysis, the two-dimensional matrix mapping the conceptual structure of the physical education research field has been developed. The matrix categorizes publications according to their themes and the age of students / the levels of education, which are the object of the analysed studies. Conclusions. The study contributes mainly to development of theory through mapping the scientific output within the physical education research field. Identification of core references provides valuable information for the scholars cultivating the field about the most recognized classical works receiving the highest number of citations and ‘emerging stars’ of the highest normalized number of citations. Such information is crucial for any theoretical reviews regarding the issues of physical education. Discovering research fronts points out the themes of the highest prominence and may be an indication for searching prospective research topics by authors. Developing the matrix to be used for mapping the conceptual structure of the research field is another contribution of the study.
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41

Bozidarevic, Sasa. "Mokranjac in the works of his successors - from the citation imitation to the citation polemics." Muzikologija, no. 22 (2017): 199–220. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/muz1722199b.

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Using the interdisciplinary approach to Stevan Mokranjac?s Garlands [Rukoveti] and his successors in the Serbian choral music after World War II, while simultaneously relying on Dubravka Oraic Tolic?s Theory of Citation (1990), I have continued the work of distinguished scholars in the field of Serbian postwar music and their diverse analytical experiences. Whilst critically evaluating the existing analytical interpretations, in this article I have pointed to the alternative solutions and interpretations of the relevant issues of the organisation of the musical flow of Garlands and related formal types in almost all relevant musicotextual segments. Departing from the problems posed by the phenomena of intertextuality and citational procedures as elaborated by Dubravka Oraic Tolic, in this article I focus on their different embodiments as established in the relation between Stevan Mokranjac?s Garlands and garlands and similar forms of the second half of the 20th century; I also specify analytical methods and their creative application on the analysis of individual choral works. During this process, certain different types of the intertexual communication in the garlands written by members of different generations required more precise definition, i.e. additions and redefining of the existing terminology of the theory of citations, and an introduction of new terms. The selected analysed sample incorporates both the works that nowadays constitute the basis of the choral concert repertoire, and the works which are nowadays mostly neglected and not so attractive to performers and music theorists.Analytical issues discussed in this study have repeatedly pointed to the importance of Stevan Mokranjac?s Garlands as a paradigm for the authors of the second half of the 20th century, and repeated the vitality of his creative contributions to Serbian music. This has, in turn, reinforced the common knowledge on the work of Mokranjac as the fundament for the development of contemporary Serbian music.
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42

Trajanoski, Žarko. "Editorial: Why Theory Against Terror(ism)?" Identities: Journal for Politics, Gender and Culture 2, no. 1 (January 1, 2003): 9–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.51151/identities.v2i1.82.

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Author(s): Žarko Trajanoski | Жарко Трајаноски Title (English): Editorial: Why Theory Against Terror(ism)? Title (Macedonian): Уводник: зошто со теорија против терор(измот)? Translated by (Macedonian to English): Žarko Trajanoski | Жарко Трајаноски Journal Reference: Identities: Journal for Politics, Gender and Culture, Vol. 2, No. 1 (Summer 2003) Publisher: Research Center in Gender Studies - Skopje and Euro-Balkan Institute Page Range: 9-11 Page Count: 3 Citation (English): Žarko Trajanoski, “Editorial: Why Theory Against Terror(ism)?,” Identities: Journal for Politics, Gender and Culture, Vol. 2, No. 1 (Summer 2003): 9-11. Citation (Macedonian): Жарко Трајаноски, „Уводник: зошто со теорија против терор(измот)?“, Идентитети: списание за политика, род и култура, т. 2, бр. 1 (лето 2003): 9-11.
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43

Wells, Charmian. "“Harlem Knows”: Eleo Pomare's Choreographic Theory of Vitality and Diaspora Citation in Blues for the Jungle." Dance Research Journal 52, no. 3 (December 2020): 4–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0149767720000339.

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This article examines Eleo Pomare's concept of vitality in his piece Blues for the Jungle (1966) as a black aesthetic approach to choreography. Vitality seeks to connect with black audiences in Harlem by referencing and affirming shared cultural knowledge, conveying an embodied epistemology of the US political economy defined by the lived experiences of Harlem: “Harlem knows.” Using a lens of diaspora citation, I argue that Pomare's choreographic citations of “vital” ways of moving and knowing in Harlem critique the terms for “proper” national belonging, while articulating diasporic belonging in motion.
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44

Yaniasih, Yaniasih. "Teori kritis terhadap analisis sitasi untuk kajian kuantitatif sains dan evaluasi kinerja riset." Berkala Ilmu Perpustakaan dan Informasi 16, no. 1 (June 23, 2020): 127–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.22146/bip.v16i1.72.

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Introduction. Citation is the main indicator in research performance evaluation using the quantitative approach. There have been many criticisms of citations since they were used half a century ago, but they have not yet succeeded in bringing new concepts and methods. This paper aims to criticize and propose a new approach to citation analysis. Data Collection Method. A contemporary critical theory methodology was adopted as a framework to collect and analyze the data. Scientific publications related to citation analysis was collected from several databases such as Google scholar, Microsoft academic search, dan Garuda Ristekdikti. Analysis Data. Publications data were critically reviewed and analyzed narratively by using open coding. Results and Discussions. The results mapped the lack of citation analysis form various aspects: (1) criticism of the positivist paradigm which did not succeed in achieving its objectives, (2) criticism of methods that produce invalid results, and (3) criticism of ethical issues of the researcher and bias in implementation. The proposed solution and recommendation is to change the citation analysis method from a simple measurement of bibliographic data to text and context analysis based on a computer science approach (machine learning techniques). Conclusion. This new method has the potential to be developed within the framework of quantitative in Science and Technology studies to overcome existing criticisms. Subsequent multidisciplinary studies are needed to lay a strong philosophical and technical foundation particularly in applying the in-text citation analysis method for evaluating research performance in accordance with the Indonesian context.
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45

Fletcher, Richard. "Plato Re-Read Too Late: Citation and Platonism in Apuleius' Apologia." Ramus 38, no. 1 (2009): 43–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0048671x00000631.

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This paper rereads Apuleius'Apologiathrough its Platonic readings. I claim that the recent focus on the ‘literarisation’ of the speech based in the speaker's learned use of literary citations needs to be contextualised within the Apuleian corpus as a whole and that one way of doing this is to emphasise the role of Platonic citation in the speech. I argue that Apuleius' strategy of literary citation as juridical defence in the first half of the speech (4-65) undergoes a process of ‘Platonisation’ that relies upon the direct quotation of Plato's Greek. I show how this ‘Platonisation’ chimes with two related themes in Apuleius' brand of Platonism that is manifest across his multifarious corpus: firstly, the role of the philosopher's biography as a heuristic device for encouraging an induction into philosophy and, secondly, the uniting of Platonic philosophical theory with Apuleius' particular literary (dramatic and rhetorical) concerns. From this basis, I show that in the second half of the speech (66-103), in spite of the absence of literary and Platonic citation, the general ideas of citation and Platonism developed in the first half are still very much at work in the contested place of Apuleius' wife Pudentilla's Greek letter as evidence for both the prosecution and the defence. While the citation of the letter by both sides raises some troubling questions for the role of literary citation in the first half of the speech, it operates as a powerful argument for the dissemination of Apuleius' Platonic message beyond the event of the trial.
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46

Satlow, Michael L., and Michael Sperling. "The Rabbinic Citation Network." AJS Review: The Journal of the Association for Jewish Studies 46, no. 2 (November 2022): 291–319. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ajs.2022.0044.

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47

Dames, N. "On the Protocols of Victorian Citation." Novel: A Forum on Fiction 42, no. 2 (June 1, 2009): 326–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00295132-2009-022.

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48

Baykoucheva, Svetla. "Eugene Garfield’s Ideas and Legacy and Their Impact on the Culture of Research." Publications 7, no. 2 (June 14, 2019): 43. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/publications7020043.

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Eugene Garfield advanced the theory and practice of information science and envisioned information systems that made the discovery of scientific information much more efficient. The Institute for Scientific Information (ISI), which he founded in Philadelphia in 1960, developed innovative information products that have revolutionized science. ISI provided current scientific information to researchers all over the world by publishing the table of contents of key scientific journals in the journal Current Contents (CC). Garfield introduced the citation as a qualitative measure of academic impact and propelled the concepts of “citation indexing” and “citation linking”, paving the way for today’s search engines. He created the Science Citation Index (SCI), which raised awareness about citations; triggered the development of new disciplines (scientometrics, infometrics, webometrics); and became the foundation for building new important products such as Web of Science. The journal impact factor (IF), originally designed to select journals for the SCI, became the most widely accepted tool for measuring academic impact. Garfield actively promoted English as the international language of science and became a powerful force in the globalization of research. His ideas changed how researchers gather scientific information, communicate their findings, and advance their careers. This article looks at the impact of Garfield’s ideas and legacy on the culture of research.
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49

Aroch Fugellie, Paulina. "Citation as Exchange Value." Open Cultural Studies 2, no. 1 (November 1, 2018): 383–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/culture-2018-0035.

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Abstract This article focuses on the interplay between correlated textual subject positions, insofar as they are differently legitimated across the New International Division of Labour (NIDL). In examining the academic system of referencing or invocation, I will pay particular attention to how it functions as a circuit of value production in the cultural domain. Marx’s theory of value production will be used as an exegetic tool to locate the workings of economic power in the referential apparatus of the contemporary academy, showing how Third-World symbolic production is undervalued despite its existence, since economic conditions retroactively foreclose the validation of Third-World intellectual and artistic production as cultural capital. As a case study, I will analyse some of the citation strategies of postcolonial theorist Anthony Appiah in In My Father’s House, which operates within the presupposition that textual subject positions (the place of enunciation in particular) are made available only to privileged subjects in the extra-textual world. Appiah’s methodology opens up what I call a circumscribed redistribution of cultural capital across the NIDL. Hence, I take In My Father’s House not only as an object of analysis but also as a critical source to understand how value production mediates academic writing, allowing Appiah’s conceptualization of the relationship between textual and social subjects to inform my own.
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50

Hummon, Norman P., and Patrick Dereian. "Connectivity in a citation network: The development of DNA theory." Social Networks 11, no. 1 (March 1989): 39–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0378-8733(89)90017-8.

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