2. REFERENCE
A reference list is a list of the resources that you
used when writing your assignment or doing
your research.
a) books, including electronic books, journals
(online an paper based)
b) conference papers, proceedings and theses
3. CITATION
It is similar to references but occurs in the body
of the text with direct quotes and paraphrases
to identify the author/publication for the
material you have used.
4. DEFINITION OF CITATION
A "citation" is the way you tell your readers that
certain material in your work came from
another source. It also provides additional
information includes
5. CITATION IMPORTANCE
Co-citation networks, documents with high
impacts or similar citation patterns can be
immediately identified, and the co-citation
relationships can be intuitively observed as
well.
6. i10-Index
i10-Index = the number of publications with at
least 10 citations.
Advantages of i10-Index
• Very simple and straightforward to calculate
• My Citations in Google Scholar is free and easy
to use
8. H INDEX
H-Index = number of papers (h) with a citation
number ≥ h.
(Ex) a scientist with an H-Index of 37 has 37
papers cited at least 37 times.
Advantages of the H-Index:
Measures quantity and impact by a single value.