The RePEc blog:

In the past weeks, CitEc, RePEc’s citation analysis website, has released new authors and series citation profiles with improved features.

Series profiles:

  • Data coverage: 1990 – 2013
  • New indicators: Cumulative number of documents published until year y, Cumulative number of citations to papers published until year y, Cumulative impact factor.
  • New graphs: Citations by publication year, cumulative citations and cumulative documents published.

Authors profiles:

  • New profile layout
  • New indicator: i10-index. Number of works with at least 10 citations.
  • Included related authors: In addition to the co-author relationships, now we include links to researchers citing and cited by the author being analyzed
  • Added a new section with recent citing documents. It is possible to identify who has cited the author in the last two years.
  • New graphs: evolution of author’s h-index and citations received by publication year.
  • Authors can upload a picture to complete their profiles

You can have a look at some examples of the new profiles:

This is really neat. Here are the authors that I have cited the most:

  • Cameron, Trudy (73)
  • Haab, Tim (47)
  • Carson, Richard (37)
  • Loomis, John (35)
  • Groothuis, Peter (26)
  • Adamowicz, Wiktor (25)
  • Smith, V. (25)
  • mcconnell, kenneth (25)
  • Blomquist, Glenn (22)
  • Shogren, Jason (19)
  • Herriges, Joseph (19)

No surprises there, except maybe that Ted McConnell insists that RePEc only uses lower case. 

You can also see a graph of your citations over time. Mine shows that my career peaked in 2011:

Citations

This is surprising. I would have thought my career peaked a long time ago.

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  1. willwheels Avatar

    If citations are a flow resulting from a stock of research output, your career might have peaked earlier (depending on the parameters).
    Mine peaked before yours.

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