Authors
Christian Catalini, Nicola Lacetera, Alexander Oettl
Publication date
2015/11/10
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
112
Issue
45
Pages
13823-13826
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Citations to previous literature are extensively used to measure the quality and diffusion of knowledge. However, we know little about the different ways in which a study can be cited; in particular, are papers cited to point out their merits or their flaws? We elaborated a methodology to characterize “negative” citations using bibliometric data and natural language processing. We found that negative citations concerned higher-quality papers, were focused on a study’s findings rather than theories or methods, and originated from scholars who were closer to the authors of the focal paper in terms of discipline and social distance, but not geographically. Receiving a negative citation was also associated with a slightly faster decline in citations to the paper in the long run.
Total citations
201620172018201920202021202220232024151319291721203516
Scholar articles
C Catalini, N Lacetera, A Oettl - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2015