Improving your citations
There are a number of ways to improve your citation rate.Where and how you publish
Making your research available as open access means that it is opento anyone, and there is a lot of evidence that says that the increased
readership leads to higher citation counts. Most journals allow you to
put the author accepted version of the article into the Repository,
others may charge to make the final published version available
freely. Your work is still published by the same journal, but it can
be read by a much wider audience than just the subscribers to the
journal.
Clear titles and abstracts
As most research is now discovered through a search engine, it isimportant to make your title clearly indicate the content of your
research so that it is obvious to searchers who may spend only a few
seconds to decide if they want to read an article. Similarly a clear,
well-structured abstract may also help your article rank better in
searches and lead more people to go to the full text. The LSE publishes an impact blog that has a couple of very good posts on this
Choosing titles 1
Choosing titles 2
Writing a good abstract
ORCID
Many authors end up with articles published with their name in avariety of formats, eg John Smith, J Smith, JM Smith, John M Smith.
Some databases may not link these, or they may be mixed up with other
authors with similar names. ORCID is a way of linking all your research
to a unique id that can be used across a number of systems.
Registering for ORCID is free and academic staff should register for one, registartion typically takes less than a minute.
ORCID can be used with databases as SCOPUS and other research systems and is becoming a de-facto standard for publishers, funders and Universities. You can link your publications to ORCID using the instructions on the ORCID website.
Google Scholar Profiles
Google Scholar is widely used around the world to locate academic research. You can set up a free profile page to link your citations and display your H index very quickly.Improving your citations - University of Huddersfield
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