Hit papers significantly outperform the citation benchmark for their cohort. A paper qualifies
if it has ≥500 total citations, achieves ≥1.5× the top-1% citation threshold for papers in the
same subfield and year (this is the minimum needed to enter the top 1%, not the average within
it), or reaches the top citation threshold in at least one of its specific research topics.
1998Journal of the American Statistical Association
This map shows the geographic impact of SW'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 SW with the expected number of citations based on a country's size and research output (numbers larger than one mean the country cites SW more than expected).
This network shows the impact of papers produced by SW. 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 SW. The network helps show where SW may publish in the future.
Co-authorship network
The 13 scholars most cited alongside SW, linked wherever they have
co-authored with each other. Click a name or a connecting line to browse the papers they
share.
Border = papers with SWLine = papers co-authored togetherSW links everyone, so they are left out of the graph.
SW is a scholar working on General Social Sciences, Software, Management Information Systems, Management Science and Operations Research and Artificial Intelligence, having authored 10 papers that have together received 1.3k indexed citations. Recurring topics across this work include Distributed systems and fault tolerance (1 paper), Computational and Text Analysis Methods (1 paper), Model-Driven Software Engineering Techniques (1 paper), Advanced Queuing Theory Analysis (1 paper), Network Traffic and Congestion Control (1 paper), Machine Learning in Healthcare (1 paper), Text and Document Classification Technologies (1 paper) and Semantic Web and Ontologies (1 paper). The work is most often cited by research in Statistics and Probability (133 citations), Management Science and Operations Research (156 citations), Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management (13 citations), Artificial Intelligence (224 citations) and Experimental and Cognitive Psychology (83 citations). Frequent co-authors include Jürgen Rost, Rolf Langeheine, Jörg Blasius, Michael Greenacre, Eugene Charniak, Barry J. Everitt, Andrew Pickles, D.D. Yao, Paul E. Green and Anil K. Chaturvedi. Their work appears in journals such as Journal of the American Statistical Association.
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.