1983
DOI: 10.1007/bf02147226
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A classification of citation roles for the social sciences and related fields

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Cited by 91 publications
(52 citation statements)
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References 8 publications
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“…Peritz (1983) estabelece que o termo Referência relaciona-se à obra citada (nome do autor e/ou da obra), enquanto que o termo Citação refere-se à menção/comentário/paráfrase da obra no texto que a contém.…”
Section: Formas De Categorizar Citaçõesunclassified
“…Peritz (1983) estabelece que o termo Referência relaciona-se à obra citada (nome do autor e/ou da obra), enquanto que o termo Citação refere-se à menção/comentário/paráfrase da obra no texto que a contém.…”
Section: Formas De Categorizar Citaçõesunclassified
“…The ways authors use frequently and infrequently cited documents were examined by the functional classification taxonomies developed by Murugesan and Moravcsik (1978), Peritz (1983), Chubin andMoitra (1973), andSpiegel-Rosing (1977). Chi square tests with and without the ARZST citings were performed for three of the four classification taxonomies.…”
Section: Functional Uses Of the Cited Articlesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Functional classification schemes developed by Murugesan and Moravcsik (1978), Peritz (1983), Chubin andMoitra (1975), andSpiegel-Rosing (1977) were used to explore whether frequently and infrequently cited documents from an information science journal were used for different functions in citing documents. The frequencies of use and patterns of use of the two groups of documents were examined to identify the consistency in interpretation of the documents over time.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, in spite of the critical reservations of Cronin and other authors, it is mostly accepted that, in general, a paper is being cited in order to make a point that is relevant to the subject at hand (Smith, 1981). It is true that one occasionally encounters citations that are casual, perfunctory or immaterial but these are not frequent; there are also instances when a study is cited in a negational mode, but these too are rare, hard to define unambiguously, and sometimes do not detract from the value of the cited publication (Moravcsik and Murugesan, 1973;Chubin and Moitra, 1975;Peritz, 1983a). In some sense, therefore, the number of times a paper is cited can be used as a roughand-ready indicator of its merit-granting, of course, variations in the citation's importance (Brooks, 198.5;Cano, 1989) and the inevitable amount of error and noise.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%