Harald Kirsch

935 total citations
14 papers, 603 citations indexed

About

Harald Kirsch is a scholar working on Molecular Biology, Artificial Intelligence and Information Systems and Management. According to data from OpenAlex, Harald Kirsch has authored 14 papers receiving a total of 603 indexed citations (citations by other indexed papers that have themselves been cited), including 13 papers in Molecular Biology, 11 papers in Artificial Intelligence and 1 paper in Information Systems and Management. Recurrent topics in Harald Kirsch's work include Biomedical Text Mining and Ontologies (13 papers), Semantic Web and Ontologies (10 papers) and Bioinformatics and Genomic Networks (7 papers). Harald Kirsch is often cited by papers focused on Biomedical Text Mining and Ontologies (13 papers), Semantic Web and Ontologies (10 papers) and Bioinformatics and Genomic Networks (7 papers). Harald Kirsch collaborates with scholars based in United Kingdom, Portugal and Russia. Harald Kirsch's co-authors include Dietrich Rebholz‐Schuhmann, Sylvain Gaudan, Miguel Arregui, Antonio Jimeno Yepes, Francisco M. Couto, Jean-Jack M. Riethoven, Peter Stoehr, Goran Nenadić, Mário J. Silva and Vivian Lee and has published in prestigious journals such as Bioinformatics, PLoS Biology and Molecular Endocrinology.

In The Last Decade

Harald Kirsch

14 papers receiving 577 citations

Peers

Harald Kirsch
Sylvain Gaudan United Kingdom
Miguel Arregui United Kingdom
Anna Divoli United States
Pauline Kra United States
Lawrence W. Wright United States
Michael Bada United States
K. B. Cohen United States
Nicholas Sioutos United States
Sylvain Gaudan United Kingdom
Harald Kirsch
Citations per year, relative to Harald Kirsch Harald Kirsch (= 1×) peers Sylvain Gaudan

Countries citing papers authored by Harald Kirsch

Since Specialization
Citations

This map shows the geographic impact of Harald Kirsch's research. It shows the number of citations coming from papers published by authors working in each country. You can also color the map by specialization and compare the number of citations received by Harald Kirsch with the expected number of citations based on a country's size and research output (numbers larger than one mean the country cites Harald Kirsch more than expected).

Fields of papers citing papers by Harald Kirsch

Since Specialization
Physical SciencesHealth SciencesLife SciencesSocial Sciences

This network shows the impact of papers produced by Harald Kirsch. Nodes represent research fields, and links connect fields that are likely to share authors. Colored nodes show fields that tend to cite the papers produced by Harald Kirsch. The network helps show where Harald Kirsch may publish in the future.

Co-authorship network of co-authors of Harald Kirsch

This figure shows the co-authorship network connecting the top 25 collaborators of Harald Kirsch. A scholar is included among the top collaborators of Harald Kirsch based on the total number of citations received by their joint publications. Widths of edges represent the number of papers authors have co-authored together. Node borders signify the number of papers an author published with Harald Kirsch. Harald Kirsch is excluded from the visualization to improve readability, since they are connected to all nodes in the network.

All Works

14 of 14 papers shown
1.
Kirsch, Harald, Kiran T. Thakur, & Gretchen L. Birbeck. (2013). Central Nervous System Infections in Travelers. Current Infectious Disease Reports. 15(6). 600–611. 1 indexed citations
2.
Li, Chen, Antonio Jimeno Yepes, Miguel Arregui, Harald Kirsch, & Dietrich Rebholz‐Schuhmann. (2013). PCorral—interactive mining of protein interactions from MEDLINE. Database. 2013. bat030–bat030. 9 indexed citations
3.
Rebholz‐Schuhmann, Dietrich, Antonio Jimeno Yepes, Miguel Arregui, & Harald Kirsch. (2009). Measuring prediction capacity of individual verbs for the identification of protein interactions. Journal of Biomedical Informatics. 43(2). 200–207. 14 indexed citations
4.
Rebholz‐Schuhmann, Dietrich, Harald Kirsch, Miguel Arregui, et al.. (2007). EBIMed—text crunching to gather facts for proteins from Medline. Bioinformatics. 23(2). e237–e244. 144 indexed citations
5.
Rebholz‐Schuhmann, Dietrich, Miguel Arregui, Sylvain Gaudan, Harald Kirsch, & Antonio Jimeno Yepes. (2007). Text processing through Web services: calling Whatizit. Bioinformatics. 24(2). 296–298. 156 indexed citations
6.
Couto, Francisco M., Mário J. Silva, Vivian Lee, et al.. (2006). GOAnnotator: linking protein GO annotations to evidence text.. PubMed. 1(1). 19–19. 38 indexed citations
7.
Rebholz‐Schuhmann, Dietrich, Harald Kirsch, & Goran Nenadić. (2006). IeXML: towards an annotation framework for biomedical semantic types enabling interoperability of text processing modules. Research Explorer (The University of Manchester). 17 indexed citations
8.
Hakenberg, Jörg, Ulf Leser, Harald Kirsch, & Dietrich Rebholz‐Schuhmann. (2006). Collecting a Large Corpus from all of Medline.. 3 indexed citations
9.
Rebholz‐Schuhmann, Dietrich, Harald Kirsch, Sylvain Gaudan, Miguel Arregui, & Goran Nenadić. (2006). Annotation and disambiguation of semantic types in biomedical text. 11–11. 11 indexed citations
10.
Rebholz‐Schuhmann, Dietrich, Harald Kirsch, & Francisco M. Couto. (2005). Facts from Text—Is Text Mining Ready to Deliver?. PLoS Biology. 3(2). e65–e65. 86 indexed citations
11.
Kirsch, Harald, Sylvain Gaudan, & Dietrich Rebholz‐Schuhmann. (2005). Distributed modules for text annotation and IE applied to the biomedical domain. International Journal of Medical Informatics. 75(6). 496–500. 19 indexed citations
12.
Gaudan, Sylvain, Harald Kirsch, & Dietrich Rebholz‐Schuhmann. (2005). Resolving abbreviations to their senses in Medline. Bioinformatics. 21(18). 3658–3664. 69 indexed citations
13.
Kirsch, Harald & Dietrich Rebholz‐Schuhmann. (2004). Distributed modules for text annotation and IE applied to the biomedical domain. 50–50. 2 indexed citations
14.
Albert, Sylvie, Sylvain Gaudan, Asunción Delgado, et al.. (2003). Computer-Assisted Generation of a Protein-Interaction Database for Nuclear Receptors. Molecular Endocrinology. 17(8). 1555–1567. 34 indexed citations

Rankless uses publication and citation data sourced from OpenAlex, an open and comprehensive bibliographic database. While OpenAlex provides broad and valuable coverage of the global research landscape, it—like all bibliographic datasets—has inherent limitations. These include incomplete records, variations in author disambiguation, differences in journal indexing, and delays in data updates. As a result, some metrics and network relationships displayed in Rankless may not fully capture the entirety of a scholar's output or impact.

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