![]() Google Scholar Citations provide a simple way for authors to keep track of citations to their articles. You can check who is citing your publications, graph citations over time, and compute several citation metrics. You can also make your profile public, so that it may appear in Google Scholar results when people search for your name, e.g.,. Best of all, it's quick to set up and simple to maintain - even if you have written hundreds of articles, and even if your name is shared by several different scholars. You can add groups of related articles, not just one article at a time; and your citation metrics are computed and updated automatically as Google Scholar finds new citations to your work on the web. You can choose to have your list of articles updated automatically or review the updates yourself, or to manually update your articles at any time. It's quick and free. • First, sign to your Google account, or create one if you don't yet have one. We recommend that you use a personal account, not an account at your employer, so that you can keep your profile for as long as you wish. • Once you've signed in to your Google account, the will ask you to confirm the spelling of your name, and to enter your affiliation, interests, etc. We recommend that you also enter your university email address which would make your profile eligible for inclusion in Google Scholar search results. • On the next page, you'll see groups of articles written by people with names similar to yours. Click 'Add all articles' next to each article group that is yours, or 'See all articles' to add specific articles from that group. If you don't see your articles in these groups, click 'Search articles' to do a regular Google Scholar search, and then add your articles one at a time. Feel free to do as many searches as you like. • Once you're done with adding articles, it will ask you what to do when the article data changes in Google Scholar. You can either have the updates applied to your profile automatically, or you can choose to review them beforehand. In either case, you can always go to your profile and make changes by hand. • Finally, you will see your profile. This is a good time to add a few finishing touches - upload your professional looking photo, visit your university email inbox and click on the verification link, double check the list of articles, and, once you're completely satisfied, make your profile public. Voila - it's now eligible to appear in Google Scholar when someone searches for your name! Select the 'Add' option from the Actions menu. Search for your articles using titles, keywords, or your name. To add one article at a time, click 'Search articles' and then 'Add article' next to the article you wish to add. Your citation metrics will update immediately to account for the articles you added. If your search doesn't find the right article, click 'Add article manually'. Then, type in the title, the authors, etc., and click 'Save'. Keep in mind that citations to manually added articles may not appear in your profile for a few days. To add a group of related articles, click 'Search article groups' and then 'Add all articles' next to the group you wish to add. If you have written articles under different names, with multiple groups of colleagues, or in different journals, you may need to select multiple groups. Your citation metrics will update immediately to account for the groups you added. Click the title of the article and then click the 'Edit' button. When you finish your changes, click the 'Save' button. If you've made substantial changes to the article, please keep the following in mind. • The list of 'Scholar articles' at the bottom of the page may no longer match the article you've edited. We recommend that you review this list and 'unmerge' the Scholar articles that no longer correspond to your article. Scholar articles affect the computation of your 'Cited by' counts and citation metrics. • As with manual additions of articles, it may take several days for all citations to the edited article to be collected in your profile. Citation Machine™ helps students and professionals properly credit the information that they use. Cite your book in Harvard Reference format 1 (author-date) format for free. ![]() You can speed up the process by adding the appropriate article from Google Scholar and then merging it with your version; then, your citation metrics will update right away. • It's possible that the article you've edited was already in your profile as a separate record. We recommend that you merge duplicate records - click the 'Title/Author' column header to sort your articles by title, select the checkboxes next to the duplicate entries, which should now be adjacent, and then select the 'Merge' option from the Actions menu. You also need to add a verified email address at your university or institution. ![]() To be eligible for inclusion in Google Scholar search results, your profile needs to be public and needs to have a verified email address at your university (non-institutional email addresses, such as gmail.com, hotmail.com, aol.com, yahoo.com, qq.com, etc., are not suitable for this purpose). To add a verified email to your profile, click the 'Edit' link next to 'No verified email', add your email address at your institution and click 'Save'. We will send you an email message with a verification link. Once you click on this link, the email address will be marked verified. Your profile will now be eligible for inclusion in Google Scholar search results. Rest assured, we will not display your email address on your public profile. Nor will we sell it, trade it, or use it to send you email unrelated to Google Scholar. Your 'Cited by' counts come from the Google Scholar index. You can change the articles in your profile, but citations to them are computed and updated automatically as we update Google Scholar. To change the 'Cited by' counts in your profile, you would need to have them updated in Google Scholar. Google Scholar generally reflects the state of the web as it is currently visible to our search robots and to the majority of users. If some of the citations to your article are not included, chances are that the citing articles are not accessible to our search robots or are formatted in ways that make it difficult for our indexing algorithms to identify their bibliographic data or references. To fix this, you'll need to identify the specific citing articles with indexing problems and work with the publisher of these articles to make the necessary changes (see our for details). For most publishers, it usually takes 6-9 months for the changes to be reflected in Google Scholar; for very large publishers, it can take much longer. This happens when the Google Scholar search index has changed, and we have been unable to match an article in your profile with the new index. Most of the time, this is because it was considered to be a duplicate of some other article in your profile, but we weren't able to determine which one. Occasionally, the article may have been removed from Google Scholar entirely, e.g., because it's no longer available on the web, or because articles that reference it have become unavailable to our search robots. To check if the article is a duplicate, go to your profile, click the 'Title/Author' header to sort by title, and look for the article in question. If the same article is indeed listed multiple times, you can safely accept the suggestion to delete the unmatched entry. However, if it isn't a duplicate entry, you can choose to keep it in your profile. Though, since it is not matched in Google Scholar, its 'Cited by' count will be zero. Note that your decision to keep an unmatched entry in your profile will not reinstate the entry in Google Scholar. See the for help on including your articles in Google Scholar. The best way to fix it depends on whether the problem appears when you search Google Scholar, or only when you view your profile. First, try to reproduce the problem in regular Google Scholar search results. E.g., search Google Scholar for the title of the article in question, or for your name. If your article is listed incorrectly there, or if you believe its 'Cited by' count is off, then refer to the. Chances are that you need to talk to your publisher to have it corrected. If, however, the problem is specific to your profile, and does not affect normal Google Scholar search results, then please do the details. Reference list Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment. Template: Author Surname, Author Initial. ( Year Published). [ebook] City: Publisher, p. Available at: Website URL [Accessed Date Accessed]. Example: Black, C. Case Management Background and Context. Available at: [Accessed 29 Sep. In-text citation Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment. Template ( Author Surname, Year Published) Example putting the client at the centre of response and developing specific case plan built around their needs and wishes. (Black, 2014) Popular Harvard Citation Guides • • • • • Other Harvard Citation Guides • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •.
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