Citation Analysis

The Hellinger Bounds on the Kullback--Leibler Divergence and the Bernstein Norm%
Tetsuya Kaji
https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.17860
71
Citation mentions
14
Cited references
6
Sections
4,404
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 van der Vaart and Wellner 2023 21 3 41.0 0.296 1.000 100%
2 Ghosal and van der Vaart 2017 13 6 23.0 0.183 1.000 100%
3 Ghosal, Ghosh and van der Vaart 2000 7 4 11.0 0.099 1.000 100%
4 Wong and Shen 1995 5 3 9.0 0.070 1.000 100%
5 Birge and Massart 1998 4 4 7.0 0.056 0.928 100%
6 van der Vaart and Wellner 1996 4 3 7.0 0.056 0.928 100%
7 Kaji, Manresa and Pouliot (self) 2023 4 4 7.0 0.056 0.928 100%
8 Kaji and Ro\v ckova (self) 2023 4 4 7.0 0.056 0.928 100%
9 Birge 1983 3 3 5.0 0.042 0.843 100%
10 Birge and Massart 1993 2 1 4.0 0.028 0.511 100%
11 van der Vaart 1998 1 1 1.0 0.014 0.406 100%
12 Gut 1992 1 1 2.0 0.014 0.406 100%
13 Barron, Birge and Massart 1999 1 1 2.0 0.014 0.406 100%
14 Yang and Barron 1999 1 1 2.0 0.014 0.406 100%
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.