Publication | Open Access
Self-citation is the hallmark of productive authors, of any gender
131
Citations
48
References
2018
Year
Productive AuthorsBibliometricsCollaboration SizeSocial SciencesImpact FactorAltmetricsComputational Social ScienceGender IdentityGender EffectGender StudiesBiasCitation AnalysisLanguage StudiesContent AnalysisAuthor NamesGendered ContextAuthor ProfilingFeminist TheorySociology
It was recently reported that men self-cite >50% more often than women across a wide variety of disciplines in the bibliographic database JSTOR. Here, we replicate this finding in a sample of 1.6 million papers from Author-ity, a version of PubMed with computationally disambiguated author names. More importantly, we show that the gender effect largely disappears when accounting for prior publication count in a multidimensional statistical model. Gender has the weakest effect on the probability of self-citation among an extensive set of features tested, including byline position, affiliation, ethnicity, collaboration size, time lag, subject-matter novelty, reference/citation counts, publication type, language, and venue. We find that self-citation is the hallmark of productive authors, of any gender, who cite their novel journal publications early and in similar venues, and more often cross citation-barriers such as language and indexing. As a result, papers by authors with short, disrupted, or diverse careers miss out on the initial boost in visibility gained from self-citations. Our data further suggest that this disproportionately affects women because of attrition and not because of disciplinary under-specialization.
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