Search Engine Optimization can help researchers who publish drive
usage, readership and citations of their articles to raise the
visibility of their research.
Whether an article is being indexed by the academic search engines is crucial, but it is also important
where an article lands in the ranked search results list as that ranking will
greatly impact the visibility of an author?s research. Items high on
the list are more likely to be read.
Access and Citations
Is your article being indexed by academic search engines like Google
Scholar, IEEE Xplore and PubMed or is it only accessible via
subscription databases the search robots can?t access to index so the
contents do not show in academic search engines?
When submitting an article for publication, authors should consider
how easily discoverable their research will be to their audience and
enhance opportunities for citation. Open-access articles receive more
citations than articles accessible only by purchase or subscription.
UC Faculty:
See University of California Open Access Policy: A How-to Guide.
Authors will benefit from selecting publishers and journals with
policies that cooperate with Google Scholar (and other search academic
engines) because it makes their published research articles available to
more readers and facilitates more citations.
Citations are a significant factor in determining rank in results pages of Google Scholar and many other academic search engines.
If a journal is not online, authors should favor those who allow
authors to put their articles on their or their institutions? home pages
and/ or repositories.