In your Google Scholar profile you can "merge" different citations. So, if
it shows different citations for "Amber 16" for example, you can tell it
to merge and consider all the same.
--
Gustavo Seabra.
On Thu, Aug 12, 2021 at 10:11 PM Shiji Zhao <shijiz.uci.edu> wrote:
> Dear Amber developers,
>
> I'm curious about how Amber citations are created/managed on academic
> platforms like Google Scholar, since I noticed that Amber citations are not
> consistently listed on Google Scholar. For example, I can easily find Amber
> 2015 and Amber 2020, but there seems to be no "official" citations for
> Amber 2016-2019, as well as Amber 2021 after its release 4 month ago. I
> wonder if there is anyone responsible for managing Amber citations?
>
> Please understand that as a young scholar, I care about building my
> academic profile and my total citation counts. If Amber citations are not
> managed appropriately, as a new Amber contributor, I'm kind of worried that
> Amber 2021 cannot be found on Google scholar so that citations on Amber
> 2021 cannot be added to my total citation counts...
>
> I appreciate any answers and opinions from you.
>
> Sincerely,
> Shiji Zhao
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>
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Received on Fri Aug 13 2021 - 09:30:02 PDT