Should you cite operational numerical weather prediction models?
May 28, 2013 by Prof. David M. Schultz
Filed under Blog, Featured, Writing
A colleague asked me a question about whether it was necessary to cite any published literature on numerical weather prediction models in your scientific papers. My response follows. I don’t have a rule, and the American Meteorological Society doesn’t either. I’ve seen papers with these models cited and other papers where they are not. My […]
Why do good papers get few citations?
May 12, 2013 by Prof. David M. Schultz
Filed under Blog, Featured, Publishing
Have you ever looked at Google Scholar or your ISI Web of Science scores and wondered who was citing your papers and why were they citing them? After thinking a bit more about why certain papers on my CV have received as much or as little attention through citation, I decided it was time to […]
The Importance of Not Being Cited
April 26, 2013 by Prof. David M. Schultz
Filed under Blog, Featured, Writing
This title comes from a 1973 paper in Current Contents by Eugene Garfield called “Uncitedness III—The Importance of Not Being Cited”. In there, Garfield talks about three reasons why papers may not be cited. I. “the uncitedness of the mediocre, the unintelligible, the irrelevant, the eccentric.” II. “the uncitedness of the meritorious but undiscovered or […]
A note on good research practice: Dooley (2013)
April 8, 2013 by Prof. David M. Schultz
Filed under Blog, Featured, Publishing, Reviewing, Writing
An editorial in the International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control is entitled “A note on good research practice.” Dooley states: By far the most common issue we editors of this journal are seeing in terms of poor scientific practice in submissions is the failure to appropriately cite the work of others. Sadly, we see numerous […]