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Title:
The Importance of Being First: Position Dependent Citation Rates on arXiv:astro-ph
Authors:
Dietrich, J. P.
Affiliation:
AA(ESO, Karl-Schwarzschild-Strasse 2, 85748 Garching b. München, Germany; )
Publication:
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, Volume 120, issue 864, pp.224-228 (PASP Homepage)
Publication Date:
02/2008
Origin:
PASP
Keywords:
Data Analysis and Techniques
Abstract Copyright:
(c) 2008: 2008. The Astronomical Society of the Pacific. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
DOI:
10.1086/527522
Bibliographic Code:
2008PASP..120..224D

Abstract

We study the dependence of citation counts of e-Prints published on the arXiv:astro-ph server on their position in the daily astro-ph listing. Using the SPIRES literature database we reconstruct the astro-ph listings from 2002 July to 2005 December and determine citation counts for e-Prints from their ADS entry. We use Zipf plots to analyze the citation distributions for each astro-ph position. We find that e-Prints appearing at or near the top of the astro-ph mailings receive significantly more citations than those further down the list. This difference is significant at the 7 level and on average amounts to 2 times more citations for papers at the top than those further down the listing. We propose three possible nonexclusive explanations for this positional citation effect and try to test them. We conclude that self-promotion by authors plays a role in the observed effect but cannot exclude that increased visibility at the top of the daily listings contributes to higher citation counts as well. We can rule out that the positional dependence of citations is caused by the coincidence of the submission deadline with the working hours of a geographically constrained set of intrinsically higher-cited authors. We discuss several ways of mitigating the observed effect, including splitting astro-ph into several subject classes, randomizing the order of e-Prints, and a novel approach to sorting entries by relevance to individual readers.
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