Abstract
We show that Eugene Garfield published articles which are neither highly cited nor completely ignored, but had a clear influence on subsequent citation generations. More precisely, we found ten articles that are under-cited influential publications, in the sense given to this expression in our earlier work. By publishing this investigation we hope to contribute to the remembrance of this great pioneer in our field.
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Acknowledgements
This work is supported by a grant of the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC Grant No. 71573225). The authors would like to thank Yuning Zhang for her help in data collection.
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1. Bernhard, S.A., Garfield, E. and Hammett, L.P. (1954). Specific effects in acid catalysis by ion exchange resins. 3. Some observations of the effects of polyvalent cations. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 76(4), 991–992.
2. Garfield, E. (1962). An algorithm for translating chemical names to molecular formulas. Journal of Chemical Documentation, 2(3), 177–179.
3. Garfield, E. (1963). Citation indexes in sociological and historical research. American Documentation, 14(4), 289–291.
4. Garfield, E. & Sher, I.H. (1967). ISI’s experiences with ASCA—A selective dissemination system. Journal of Chemical Documentation, 7(3), 147–153.
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7. Garfield, E. and Welljams-Dorof, A. (1990).The impact of fraudulent research on the scientific literature—The Stephen E. Breuning case. JAMA – Journal of the American Medical Association, 263(10), 1424–1426.
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10. Garfield, E., Pudovkin, A.I. and Istomin, V.S. (2003). Why do we need algorithmic historiography? Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 54(5), 400–412.
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Rousseau, R., Hu, X. Under-cited influential work by Eugene Garfield. Scientometrics 114, 651–657 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11192-017-2530-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11192-017-2530-8