Back to the past: on the shoulders of an academic search engine giant

A study released by the Google Scholar team found an apparently increasing fraction of citations to old articles from studies published in the last 24 years (1990–2013). To demonstrate this finding we conducted a complementary study using a different data source (Journal Citation Reports), metric (aggregate cited half-life), time spam (2003–2013), and set of categories (53 Social Science subject categories and 167 Science subject categories). Although the results obtained confirm and reinforce the previous findings, the possible causes of this phenomenon keep unclear. We finally hypothesize that “first page results syndrome” in conjunction with the fact that Google Scholar favours the most cited documents are suggesting the growing trend of citing old documents is partly caused by Google Scholar.

[1]  Enrique Orduña-Malea,et al.  Empirical Evidences in Citation-Based Search Engines: Is Microsoft Academic Search dead? , 2014, Online Inf. Rev..

[2]  Richard Van Noorden Google Scholar pioneer on search engine’s future , 2014 .

[3]  Vincent Larivière,et al.  Long-term variations in the aging of scientific literature: From exponential growth to steady-state science (1900-2004) , 2008, J. Assoc. Inf. Sci. Technol..

[4]  R. Perrucci,et al.  From Little Science to Big Science , 2017 .

[5]  Leo Egghe,et al.  Aging, obsolescence, impact, growth, and utilization: Definitions and relations , 2000, J. Am. Soc. Inf. Sci..

[6]  魏屹东,et al.  Scientometrics , 2018, Encyclopedia of Big Data.

[7]  Carol Tenopir,et al.  Electronic Journals and Changes in Scholarly Article Seeking and Reading Patterns , 2008, D Lib Mag..

[8]  Jöran Beel,et al.  Google Scholar’s Ranking Algorithm : An Introductory Overview , 2009 .

[9]  Enrique Orduña-Malea,et al.  Methods for estimating the size of Google Scholar , 2014, Scientometrics.

[10]  José Luis Ortega Academic search engines : a quantitative outlook , 2014 .

[11]  Enrique Orduña-Malea,et al.  Google Scholar Metrics evolution: an analysis according to languages , 2013, Scientometrics.

[12]  Lav R. Varshney,et al.  The Google effect in doctoral theses , 2012, Scientometrics.

[13]  Philip M. Davis,et al.  Cited Half-Life of the Journal Literature , 2015, ArXiv.

[14]  Leo Egghe,et al.  On the influence of growth on obsolescence , 1993, Scientometrics.

[15]  R. E. Burton,et al.  The “half‐life” of some scientific and technical literatures , 1960 .

[16]  Enrique Orduña-Malea,et al.  Does Google Scholar contain all highly cited documents (1950-2013)? , 2014, ArXiv.

[17]  Carol Tenopir,et al.  Electronic Journals and Changes in Scholarly Article Seeking and Reading Patterns , 2008 .

[18]  Cliff Chiung-Yu Lin,et al.  On the Shoulders of Giants: The Growing Impact of Older Articles , 2014, ArXiv.

[19]  Péter Jacsó,et al.  Academic Search Engines: A Quantitative Outlook , 2015, Online Inf. Rev..

[20]  Maurice B. Line,et al.  THE ‘HALF‐LIFE’ OF PERIODICAL LITERATURE: APPARENT AND REAL OBSOLESCENCE , 1970 .

[21]  P. Gross,et al.  COLLEGE LIBRARIES AND CHEMICAL EDUCATION. , 1927, Science.

[22]  C. F. Gosnell Obsolescence of Books in College Libraries , 1944 .

[23]  Rosario Ruiz-Baños,et al.  Envejecimiento de la literatura científica en Documentación: Influencia del origen nacional de las revistas. Estudio de una muestra , 1996 .