Is relevant self-citation an effective way to promote your work?












3














This question was inspired by the confusing headline (now edited) for
How should I respond to a reviewer's complaint about self-citation?



Does self-citation actually promote your previous publications?



We have questions about inappropriate self-citation, but what about self-citation that is relevant? Does it bring attention to research?










share|improve this question
























  • Related questions academia.stackexchange.com/questions/95736/… academia.stackexchange.com/questions/59109/… academia.stackexchange.com/questions/21797/…
    – Anonymous Physicist
    2 days ago












  • This answer, to one of the linked questions, more than answers the question posed, ... see academia.stackexchange.com/a/122613/72855
    – Solar Mike
    2 days ago












  • @SolarMike I think you linked to the wrong answer. corey979 actually argues both ways. academia.stackexchange.com/a/122611/13240
    – Anonymous Physicist
    2 days ago










  • Clicking on the link I provided, takes me to Buffy's answer, which is the point as it is about self-plagiarism...
    – Solar Mike
    2 days ago










  • You probably want to explicitly say "...where relevant and justified" to avoid misinterpretations.
    – smci
    2 days ago
















3














This question was inspired by the confusing headline (now edited) for
How should I respond to a reviewer's complaint about self-citation?



Does self-citation actually promote your previous publications?



We have questions about inappropriate self-citation, but what about self-citation that is relevant? Does it bring attention to research?










share|improve this question
























  • Related questions academia.stackexchange.com/questions/95736/… academia.stackexchange.com/questions/59109/… academia.stackexchange.com/questions/21797/…
    – Anonymous Physicist
    2 days ago












  • This answer, to one of the linked questions, more than answers the question posed, ... see academia.stackexchange.com/a/122613/72855
    – Solar Mike
    2 days ago












  • @SolarMike I think you linked to the wrong answer. corey979 actually argues both ways. academia.stackexchange.com/a/122611/13240
    – Anonymous Physicist
    2 days ago










  • Clicking on the link I provided, takes me to Buffy's answer, which is the point as it is about self-plagiarism...
    – Solar Mike
    2 days ago










  • You probably want to explicitly say "...where relevant and justified" to avoid misinterpretations.
    – smci
    2 days ago














3












3








3







This question was inspired by the confusing headline (now edited) for
How should I respond to a reviewer's complaint about self-citation?



Does self-citation actually promote your previous publications?



We have questions about inappropriate self-citation, but what about self-citation that is relevant? Does it bring attention to research?










share|improve this question















This question was inspired by the confusing headline (now edited) for
How should I respond to a reviewer's complaint about self-citation?



Does self-citation actually promote your previous publications?



We have questions about inappropriate self-citation, but what about self-citation that is relevant? Does it bring attention to research?







citations self-promotion






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 days ago









corey979

3,99252032




3,99252032










asked 2 days ago









Anonymous PhysicistAnonymous Physicist

18.9k63878




18.9k63878












  • Related questions academia.stackexchange.com/questions/95736/… academia.stackexchange.com/questions/59109/… academia.stackexchange.com/questions/21797/…
    – Anonymous Physicist
    2 days ago












  • This answer, to one of the linked questions, more than answers the question posed, ... see academia.stackexchange.com/a/122613/72855
    – Solar Mike
    2 days ago












  • @SolarMike I think you linked to the wrong answer. corey979 actually argues both ways. academia.stackexchange.com/a/122611/13240
    – Anonymous Physicist
    2 days ago










  • Clicking on the link I provided, takes me to Buffy's answer, which is the point as it is about self-plagiarism...
    – Solar Mike
    2 days ago










  • You probably want to explicitly say "...where relevant and justified" to avoid misinterpretations.
    – smci
    2 days ago


















  • Related questions academia.stackexchange.com/questions/95736/… academia.stackexchange.com/questions/59109/… academia.stackexchange.com/questions/21797/…
    – Anonymous Physicist
    2 days ago












  • This answer, to one of the linked questions, more than answers the question posed, ... see academia.stackexchange.com/a/122613/72855
    – Solar Mike
    2 days ago












  • @SolarMike I think you linked to the wrong answer. corey979 actually argues both ways. academia.stackexchange.com/a/122611/13240
    – Anonymous Physicist
    2 days ago










  • Clicking on the link I provided, takes me to Buffy's answer, which is the point as it is about self-plagiarism...
    – Solar Mike
    2 days ago










  • You probably want to explicitly say "...where relevant and justified" to avoid misinterpretations.
    – smci
    2 days ago
















Related questions academia.stackexchange.com/questions/95736/… academia.stackexchange.com/questions/59109/… academia.stackexchange.com/questions/21797/…
– Anonymous Physicist
2 days ago






Related questions academia.stackexchange.com/questions/95736/… academia.stackexchange.com/questions/59109/… academia.stackexchange.com/questions/21797/…
– Anonymous Physicist
2 days ago














This answer, to one of the linked questions, more than answers the question posed, ... see academia.stackexchange.com/a/122613/72855
– Solar Mike
2 days ago






This answer, to one of the linked questions, more than answers the question posed, ... see academia.stackexchange.com/a/122613/72855
– Solar Mike
2 days ago














@SolarMike I think you linked to the wrong answer. corey979 actually argues both ways. academia.stackexchange.com/a/122611/13240
– Anonymous Physicist
2 days ago




@SolarMike I think you linked to the wrong answer. corey979 actually argues both ways. academia.stackexchange.com/a/122611/13240
– Anonymous Physicist
2 days ago












Clicking on the link I provided, takes me to Buffy's answer, which is the point as it is about self-plagiarism...
– Solar Mike
2 days ago




Clicking on the link I provided, takes me to Buffy's answer, which is the point as it is about self-plagiarism...
– Solar Mike
2 days ago












You probably want to explicitly say "...where relevant and justified" to avoid misinterpretations.
– smci
2 days ago




You probably want to explicitly say "...where relevant and justified" to avoid misinterpretations.
– smci
2 days ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















10














The answer might depend on how you define "effective promotion", but there is scientometric research concluding that self-citation leads to more citations - crucially including more citations by others. Instead of a comprehensive literature survey (which I'm ill-equipped to write), I'll just refer you to one of the more important papers on the topic as an inroad to the field.



Studying citations to Norwegian scientists, Fowler and Aksnes: "Does self-citation pay?", Scientometrics 72, 427-437 (2007) found (non-paywalled version)




that the more one cites oneself the more one is cited by other scholars. Controlling for numerous sources of variation in cumulative citations from others, our models suggest that each additional self-citation increases the number of citations from others by about one after one year, and by about three after five years. Moreover, there is no significant penalty for the most frequent self-citers — the effect of self-citation remains positive even for very high rates of self-citation.







share|improve this answer































    1














    Citing your own work that doesn't contribute to the current work should be seen as wrong. That is improper self promotion. Citations, whether of yourself or others should be done to support the arguments of the current paper.



    Citing things not relevant is a disservice to readers.



    Use citation for the purpose for which it was created: allow the reader to follow arguments back to their source.



    The exception would be a survey paper in which you are simply gathering the important documents of some subfield. But for a paper that hopes to advance scientific knowledge, leave out the things not relevant to the conclusions. You cite yourself in such work so as to avoid self-plagiarism.



    Needing to "promote" your own work also seems a bit odd to me. If the work is good, it doesn't need promotion. The work should stand on its own. Or not. Spend your efforts on doing good work, not on advertising it.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 4




      -1 off topic, this is addressed by other questions, as mentioned above.
      – Anonymous Physicist
      2 days ago













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    2 Answers
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    active

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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

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    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    10














    The answer might depend on how you define "effective promotion", but there is scientometric research concluding that self-citation leads to more citations - crucially including more citations by others. Instead of a comprehensive literature survey (which I'm ill-equipped to write), I'll just refer you to one of the more important papers on the topic as an inroad to the field.



    Studying citations to Norwegian scientists, Fowler and Aksnes: "Does self-citation pay?", Scientometrics 72, 427-437 (2007) found (non-paywalled version)




    that the more one cites oneself the more one is cited by other scholars. Controlling for numerous sources of variation in cumulative citations from others, our models suggest that each additional self-citation increases the number of citations from others by about one after one year, and by about three after five years. Moreover, there is no significant penalty for the most frequent self-citers — the effect of self-citation remains positive even for very high rates of self-citation.







    share|improve this answer




























      10














      The answer might depend on how you define "effective promotion", but there is scientometric research concluding that self-citation leads to more citations - crucially including more citations by others. Instead of a comprehensive literature survey (which I'm ill-equipped to write), I'll just refer you to one of the more important papers on the topic as an inroad to the field.



      Studying citations to Norwegian scientists, Fowler and Aksnes: "Does self-citation pay?", Scientometrics 72, 427-437 (2007) found (non-paywalled version)




      that the more one cites oneself the more one is cited by other scholars. Controlling for numerous sources of variation in cumulative citations from others, our models suggest that each additional self-citation increases the number of citations from others by about one after one year, and by about three after five years. Moreover, there is no significant penalty for the most frequent self-citers — the effect of self-citation remains positive even for very high rates of self-citation.







      share|improve this answer


























        10












        10








        10






        The answer might depend on how you define "effective promotion", but there is scientometric research concluding that self-citation leads to more citations - crucially including more citations by others. Instead of a comprehensive literature survey (which I'm ill-equipped to write), I'll just refer you to one of the more important papers on the topic as an inroad to the field.



        Studying citations to Norwegian scientists, Fowler and Aksnes: "Does self-citation pay?", Scientometrics 72, 427-437 (2007) found (non-paywalled version)




        that the more one cites oneself the more one is cited by other scholars. Controlling for numerous sources of variation in cumulative citations from others, our models suggest that each additional self-citation increases the number of citations from others by about one after one year, and by about three after five years. Moreover, there is no significant penalty for the most frequent self-citers — the effect of self-citation remains positive even for very high rates of self-citation.







        share|improve this answer














        The answer might depend on how you define "effective promotion", but there is scientometric research concluding that self-citation leads to more citations - crucially including more citations by others. Instead of a comprehensive literature survey (which I'm ill-equipped to write), I'll just refer you to one of the more important papers on the topic as an inroad to the field.



        Studying citations to Norwegian scientists, Fowler and Aksnes: "Does self-citation pay?", Scientometrics 72, 427-437 (2007) found (non-paywalled version)




        that the more one cites oneself the more one is cited by other scholars. Controlling for numerous sources of variation in cumulative citations from others, our models suggest that each additional self-citation increases the number of citations from others by about one after one year, and by about three after five years. Moreover, there is no significant penalty for the most frequent self-citers — the effect of self-citation remains positive even for very high rates of self-citation.








        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 2 days ago

























        answered 2 days ago









        AnyonAnyon

        6,99622641




        6,99622641























            1














            Citing your own work that doesn't contribute to the current work should be seen as wrong. That is improper self promotion. Citations, whether of yourself or others should be done to support the arguments of the current paper.



            Citing things not relevant is a disservice to readers.



            Use citation for the purpose for which it was created: allow the reader to follow arguments back to their source.



            The exception would be a survey paper in which you are simply gathering the important documents of some subfield. But for a paper that hopes to advance scientific knowledge, leave out the things not relevant to the conclusions. You cite yourself in such work so as to avoid self-plagiarism.



            Needing to "promote" your own work also seems a bit odd to me. If the work is good, it doesn't need promotion. The work should stand on its own. Or not. Spend your efforts on doing good work, not on advertising it.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 4




              -1 off topic, this is addressed by other questions, as mentioned above.
              – Anonymous Physicist
              2 days ago


















            1














            Citing your own work that doesn't contribute to the current work should be seen as wrong. That is improper self promotion. Citations, whether of yourself or others should be done to support the arguments of the current paper.



            Citing things not relevant is a disservice to readers.



            Use citation for the purpose for which it was created: allow the reader to follow arguments back to their source.



            The exception would be a survey paper in which you are simply gathering the important documents of some subfield. But for a paper that hopes to advance scientific knowledge, leave out the things not relevant to the conclusions. You cite yourself in such work so as to avoid self-plagiarism.



            Needing to "promote" your own work also seems a bit odd to me. If the work is good, it doesn't need promotion. The work should stand on its own. Or not. Spend your efforts on doing good work, not on advertising it.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 4




              -1 off topic, this is addressed by other questions, as mentioned above.
              – Anonymous Physicist
              2 days ago
















            1












            1








            1






            Citing your own work that doesn't contribute to the current work should be seen as wrong. That is improper self promotion. Citations, whether of yourself or others should be done to support the arguments of the current paper.



            Citing things not relevant is a disservice to readers.



            Use citation for the purpose for which it was created: allow the reader to follow arguments back to their source.



            The exception would be a survey paper in which you are simply gathering the important documents of some subfield. But for a paper that hopes to advance scientific knowledge, leave out the things not relevant to the conclusions. You cite yourself in such work so as to avoid self-plagiarism.



            Needing to "promote" your own work also seems a bit odd to me. If the work is good, it doesn't need promotion. The work should stand on its own. Or not. Spend your efforts on doing good work, not on advertising it.






            share|improve this answer














            Citing your own work that doesn't contribute to the current work should be seen as wrong. That is improper self promotion. Citations, whether of yourself or others should be done to support the arguments of the current paper.



            Citing things not relevant is a disservice to readers.



            Use citation for the purpose for which it was created: allow the reader to follow arguments back to their source.



            The exception would be a survey paper in which you are simply gathering the important documents of some subfield. But for a paper that hopes to advance scientific knowledge, leave out the things not relevant to the conclusions. You cite yourself in such work so as to avoid self-plagiarism.



            Needing to "promote" your own work also seems a bit odd to me. If the work is good, it doesn't need promotion. The work should stand on its own. Or not. Spend your efforts on doing good work, not on advertising it.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 2 days ago

























            answered 2 days ago









            BuffyBuffy

            39k9125201




            39k9125201








            • 4




              -1 off topic, this is addressed by other questions, as mentioned above.
              – Anonymous Physicist
              2 days ago
















            • 4




              -1 off topic, this is addressed by other questions, as mentioned above.
              – Anonymous Physicist
              2 days ago










            4




            4




            -1 off topic, this is addressed by other questions, as mentioned above.
            – Anonymous Physicist
            2 days ago






            -1 off topic, this is addressed by other questions, as mentioned above.
            – Anonymous Physicist
            2 days ago




















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