Searching for papers by an author with a common name
How do you find a paper by an author with a common name?
Note: the Quick Start series is designed to get you started with the new interface. More advanced information on searching can be found in the Search Syntax help page and other pages in the “Making a Query” and “Search Results” sections.
Finding a paper by an author with a common name, especially if you have little else to go on, can be like finding a needle in a haystack. However, there are some strategies that can help.
Exact name matching
By default, SciX returns all relevant matches when searching for author names. For example, searching for author:“smith, j” will return results for J. Smith, Jane Smith, and John Smith, amongst others. To disable this synonym expansion, use the equals sign operator (=). Searching for =author:“smith, j” will only return results where the first initial was used in place of the full spelled-out given name.
This can be especially helpful when a given author often uses their middle initial. For example, compare the number of results for author Y. Wang:
With those for author Y. S. Wang:
Filtering results
The facets are useful when trying to narrow down a large list of search results. In addition to the author facet, which allows you to include or exclude name variations of authors, try these facets. All are located in the left-hand column, unless otherwise noted:
- Years: located at the top of the left-hand column, the year sliders allow you to select a publication year or range of publication years to include or exclude
- Collections: by default, records from all database collections (astronomy, physics, and general) are searched from the one-box modern search interface. Limit or exclude collections here as necessary
- Refereed: limit your search to refereed or non-refereed records
- Publications: if the journal or other publication name is known, select it here
- Bib Groups: some telescopes and research institutes maintain curated listings of records relevant to their institutions; these groupings are listed here
- Data: filter based on the availability of specific links to data products, such as NASA missions, archives, SIMBAD, and NED
- SIMBAD and NED Objects: filter based on a specific object
I’m an author with a common name; how do I make my papers easier to find?
If you’re an author with a common name, there are some strategies you can follow to make your papers more discoverable.
Tips & Tricks
- Include your full name and at least your middle initial in author lists.
- If possible, use the same form of your name (e.g. initial vs. spelled-out form of your given or middle names) when publishing.
- If you’ve changed your name (given or family name) since you’ve begun publishing, email us and we can link your name variations together. Thereafter, searching for one name variation will return publications under all linked names.
ORCID
Create an ORCID ID. After obtaining your ID, claim your papers in ADS. We’ll do some basic checks to make sure you haven’t claimed someone else’s papers by mistake and link your ORCID ID to your papers within 24 hours. As part of this process, the papers you claim within ADS will automatically be pushed to your ORCID record on orcid.org. For current and future publications, many journals (such as ApJ) now accept ORCID IDs upon submission; ORCID IDs submitted this way will automatically populate in ADS after paper publication.
After linking your ORCID ID with your publications, users will be able to search for your papers using the syntax orcid:XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX. You may link to the search results using this syntax: https://scixplorer.org/search?q=orcid%3AXXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX
Public library
In some situations, creating a library, making it public, and sharing the link may be useful.