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SCOPUS/GOOGLE SCHOLAR PROFILES

SCOPUS/GOOGLE SCHOLAR PROFILES. LIBRARY SUPPORT RESEARCH PROGRAMME. ANECA ASSESMENT INFORMATION HOW TO WRITE AND PUBLISH QUICK GUIDES SEMINARS. IRALIS (E-LIS ) Fecyt . Dialnet WOS, Scopus ORCID Researcher ID Mendeley Research Gate Google Scholar.

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SCOPUS/GOOGLE SCHOLAR PROFILES

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  1. SCOPUS/GOOGLE SCHOLAR PROFILES LIBRARY SUPPORT RESEARCH PROGRAMME

  2. ANECA ASSESMENT INFORMATION • HOW TO WRITE AND PUBLISH • QUICK GUIDES • SEMINARS

  3. IRALIS (E-LIS) • Fecyt. Dialnet • WOS, Scopus • ORCID • Researcher ID • Mendeley • Research Gate • Google Scholar

  4. AUTHOR PROFILE: Register Scopus To register all you need to do is open your web browser and type in the URL http://www.scopus.com/scopus/personalization/bulkActivation.urland enter your registration ID and password as provided in the email you received

  5. After entering your registration ID and password, click submit. You will now be asked to complete a brief user profile in order to activate your profile. As part of your user profile you will be prompted to select a personal password. After submitting the profile you will be assigned a user name valid for use on Scopus & ScienceDirect through your institution. Your user name will be based on combination of your given name and your family name as it appears in your profile. Both the user name and the password are case sensitive.

  6. Fourth step: fill out Registration

  7. .

  8. . The Scopus author identifier distinguishes you from other authors by assigning you a unique number and then grouping all your documents together. However, if your name has appeared in various ways during your authoring career or you’ve changed affiliations at any point, your publications may be spread over a number of different author profiles. Clarify your identity by checking that the list of publications associated with your Scopus author identifier is correct, and use the ORCID integration to link your Scopus information with an ORCID ID

  9. The easiest way to manage your profile is through the Scopus to ORCID wizard: http://orcid.scopusfeedback.com/. If you choose to create an ORCID ID (or link your existing ORCID ID with your Scopus author identifier), you’ll see a link to that ORCID ID on your Scopus author page. . Actualizado 16/02/2016

  10. This will ensure that your: • Publications are easy to find, • Citation metrics in Scopus, such as your total citation count and h-index, are correct, and • List of publications in Scopus, and possibly used on other websites via feeds, is complete.

  11. CREATE GOOGLE PROFILE 1.Create aGmail account or log in. 2. Fill the Registration form. 3. Once you've signed in to your Google account, the Citations sign up form will ask you to confirm your name, and to enter your affiliation, research interests, etc.

  12. On the next page, you'll see groups of articles written by people with names similar to yours. Click "Add all articles" next to each article group that is yours, or "See all articles" to add specific articles from that group. If you don't see your articles in these groups, click "Search articles" to do a regular Google Scholar search, and then add your articles one at a time. Take into account that you may have to search for multiple versions of your name, in order to find all of your articles in Google Scholar.

  13. Once you're done with adding articles, it will ask you what to do when the article data changes in Google Scholar. You can either have the updates applied to your profile automatically, or you can choose to review them beforehand. In either case, you can always go to your profile and make changes by hand. 

  14. Finally, you will see your profile. You can upload your professional photo, visit your email inbox and click on the verification link, double check the list of articles, and, once you're completely satisfied, make your profile public.

  15. TIPS: PROFILE WITH GOOGLE SCHOLAR • Clean up your Google Scholar Profile data • By changing your Profile settings to require Google Scholar to email you for approval before adding anything. To make this change, from your main Profile page, click the “More” button that appears in the top grey bar. Select “Profile updates” and change the setting to “Don’t automatically update my profile.”

  16. 2. Increase your “Googleability” That functionality only works if your profile is set to “public.” If it’s not already public, change your profile visibility by clicking the “Edit” button at the top of your profile, selecting “My profile is public”, and then clicking “Save”. Then select double-check your profile visibility by loading your profile and, at the top of the main page, confirming that it reads, “My profile is public” beneath your affiliation information.

  17. 3. Stay up-to-date when you’ve been cited and follow new articles You can set up alerts whenever you’re cited. Go to your profile page and click the blue “Follow” button at the top of your profile. Click it. Enter your preferred email address in the box that appears, then click “Create alert.” You’ll now get an alert anytime you’ve received a citation.

  18. Create Google Scholar Research groups Creating a group profile in Google Scholar is a very powerful way to demonstrate the impact of your research group, and you can easily embed a web address in your departmental web page, email signature or Powerpoint presentations.

  19. Make sure everyone uses the same affiliation. (2) Each researcher should provide up to six key words and phrases to describe their research interests. Thereis no standard list so it helps to agree these collectively and in advance to make it easier for people to findyou. (3) You should also agree what photographs you are going to use: ideally these should be the same size andshape and have a consistent style.

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