Abstract
A growing number of researchers are exploring the use of citation relationships such as direct citation, bibliographic coupling, and co-citation for information retrieval in scientific databases and digital libraries. In this paper, I propose a method of ranking the relevance of citation-based search results to a set of key, or seed, papers by measuring the number of citation relationships they share with those key papers. I tested the method against 23 published systematic reviews and found that the method retrieved 87% of the studies included in these reviews. The relevance ranking approach identified a subset of the citation search results that comprised 27% of the total documents retrieved by the method, and 7% of the documents retrieved by these reviews, but that contained 75% of the studies included in these reviews. Additional testing suggested that the method may be less appropriate for reviews that combine literature in ways that are not reflected in the literature itself. These results suggest that this ranking method could be useful in a range of information retrieval contexts.
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Thanks to Cindy Clark of the NIH Library for reviewing and editing a previous draft of this manuscript. Thanks also to two anonymous reviewers whose comments improved the manuscript.
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Belter, C.W. A relevance ranking method for citation-based search results. Scientometrics 112, 731–746 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11192-017-2406-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11192-017-2406-y