On the Causal Effect of Fame on Citations
Published Online:8 Dec 2023https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2022.00840
References
- (2015) Combined measurement of the Higgs Boson Mass in pp collisions at √s =7 and 8 TeV with the ATLAS and CMS experiments. Phys. Rev. Lett. 114(19):191803.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2015) Is paper uncitedness a function of the alphabet? Working Paper, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Canada.Google Scholar
- (2014) Matthew: Effect or fable? Manage. Sci. 60(1):92–109.Link, Google Scholar
- (2004) Are Emily and Greg more employable than Lakisha and Jamal? A field experiment on labor market discrimination. Amer. Econom. Rev. 94(4):991–1013.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2014) Networks and productivity: Causal evidence from editor rotations. J. Financial Econom. 111(1):251–270.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2018) Do economists swing for the fences after tenure? J. Econom. Perspect. 32(1):179–194.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2020) Are referees and editors in economics gender neutral? Quart. J. Econom. 135(1):269–327.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2008) Alphabet economics: The link between names and reputation. J. Socio-Economics 37(3):1266–1285.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2006) What’s in a surname? The effects of surname initials on academic success. J. Econom. Perspect. 20(1):175–187.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2017) It’s good to be first: Order bias in reading and citing NBER working papers. Rev. Econom. Statist. 9(1):32–39.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2018) Citations in economics: Measurement, uses, and impacts. J. Econom. Lit. 56(1):115–156.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2012) Reputation and earnings: The roles of quality and quantity in academe. Econom. Inq. 50(1):1–16.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2009) Positional effects on citation and readership in ArXiv. J. Amer. Soc. Inf. Sci. Technol. 60(11):2203–2218.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2020) Publishing and promotion in economics: The tyranny of the top five. J. Econom. Lit. 58(2):419–470.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2015) Do ABCs get more citations than XYZs? Econom. Inq. 53(1):773–789.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2011) Helping consumers know themselves. Amer. Econom. Rev. 101(3):417–422.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2020) Scientific prizes and post-award attention: Evidence from the nobel prize in economics. Questrom School of Business Research Paper No. 3534922, Boston University, Boston, MA.Google Scholar
- (1968) The Matthew effect in science: The reward and communication systems of science are considered. Science 159(3810):56–63.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2018) Certified random: A new order for coauthorship. Amer. Econom. Rev. 108(2):489–520.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2021) Gender differences in recognition for group work. J. Political Econom. 129(1):101–147.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2011) Status, quality, and attention: What’s in a (missing) name? Management Sci. 57(2):274–290.Link, Google Scholar
- (2023) The effect of conference presentations on the diffusion of ideas. Working Paper, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.Google Scholar
- (2008) The benefits of being economics professor A (rather than Z). Economica 75(300):782–796.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2018) The effects of listing authors in alphabetical order: A review of the empirical evidence. Res. Eval. 27(3):238–245.Crossref, Google Scholar

