Google Scholar is a special version of Google specially designed for searching scholarly literature. It covers peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, preprints, abstracts and technical reports from al…
Duplication rates (proportion of total results that are duplicates) in Google Scholar and Web of Science searches across the 7 case studies. Duplication rates are assessed for up to 1,000 sear…
In general, across all areas of research, for papers published in 2009 and 2014, we found that 55% of all documents we examined could be accessed in some way for free through GoogleSc…
What is Google Scholar? Google Scholar searches across many scholarly disciplines and sources: articles, theses, books, abstracts and court opinions, academic publishers, professional societie…
2.2 Basic functioning of GoogleScholar . In this section we first present a concise but accurate description of how the GS search engine works. Secondly, we describe its main inclusion criteri…
Google Scholar Citations is a tool that can be used to maintain a list of your publications. This list can be used to create a public profile of your research for sharing with others. It will also provide …
Google Scholar. Results Page. Features of a Google Scholar Result. A result in the Google Scholar looks like a mix between a normal Google result and a result in a library database. At th…
1. Go to scholar.google.com. 2. Click the Alerts icon at the top of the page. 3. Click Create Alert. 4. Type your search string in the Alert query box. 5. Click Create Alert to save your alert. For more …
What is GoogleScholar? GoogleScholar searches and indexes scholarly literature on the web, including articles, theses, books, abstracts and court opinions.
GoogleScholar uses the Google search engine to search for scholarly materials, such as research papers, preprints, theses, books, and reports, coming from a variety of academic publishers, pro…