What does it mean to "track citations"?
Suppose you have written a scholarly article. Over time, others may read and cite your article in another publication. Without checking thousands of publications yourself, how can you keep track of how many times other authors have cited your work?
The answer is citation tracking, also called "cited reference searching." It is one way of measuring the influence of one published research article.
The library has two sources (databases) that are considered the "go to" sources for discovering how many times an article has been cited. These databases also can help you to discover:
- the impact factor of a journal, which is based on the number of times a journal's articles were cited over a year (see Journal Citation Reports, below)
- the h-index of an author, which is the highest number of times an article was cited that matches the highest number of articles published by that author (simply put, an h-index of 5 means one has published 5 articles that were cited 5 or more times)
- a list of articles on a topic, sorted by number of times cited, most to least
- the highest impact journals within a field