Citation Analysis

Debiased Nonparametric Regression for Statistical Inference and Distributionally Robustness
Masahiro Kato
https://arxiv.org/abs/2412.20173
38
Citation mentions
25
Cited references
9
Sections
3,112
Words (approx)

References by Citation Intensity

Ordered by composite index (descending). Higher values indicate more intensive citation.

# Reference Year Mentions Breadth Sec. Wtd Share Composite Main %
1 3 2 3.0 0.079 0.737 100%
2 3 2 4.5 0.079 0.737 100%
3 3 2 3.0 0.079 0.737 100%
4 2 2 2.5 0.053 0.644 100%
5 2 2 2.5 0.053 0.644 100%
6 2 2 2.5 0.053 0.644 100%
7 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.406 100%
8 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.406 100%
9 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.406 100%
10 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.406 100%
11 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.406 100%
12 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.406 100%
13 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.406 100%
14 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.406 100%
15 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.406 100%
16 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.406 100%
17 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.406 100%
18 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.406 100%
19 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.406 100%
20 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.406 100%
21 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.406 100%
22 1 1 2.0 0.026 0.406 100%
23 1 1 2.0 0.026 0.406 100%
24 5 2 2.5 0.132 0.188 0%
25 1 1 0.5 0.026 0.087 0%
Measures: Mentions = total in-text citations; Breadth = distinct sections; Sec. Wtd = section-weighted count (body ×2, lit review/appendix ×0.5); Share = mentions / total citations in paper; Composite = geometric mean of normalised count, breadth, and main-text ratio; Main % = fraction of mentions in main text (excl. appendix). (self) = self-citation.