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Scholar Publication Analyzer is a powerful Chrome extension that instantly analyzes any Google Scholar profile and reveals publication patterns, venue preferences, and research trends. Perfect for researchers, academics, and students who want to understand where scholars publish their work. KEY FEATURES: - Automatically extracts venue information from any Google Scholar profile - Intelligently groups similar venues (e.g., "CVPR 2023" and "IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition" are recognized as the same venue) - Creates a clean, ranked list of publication venues with accurate counts - Works with profiles of any size - from new researchers to established professors - Simple one-click operation with results displayed instantly - Optimized for large profiles (handle 900+ papers in ~10 seconds) PERFECT FOR: - Researchers analyzing publication patterns - Department heads evaluating faculty contributions - Students exploring potential advisors' publication history - Academic committees assessing research impact - Anyone curious about where a particular scholar publishes HOW IT WORKS: 1. Navigate to any Google Scholar profile 2. Click the extension icon 3. Press "Analyze Publication Venues" 4. View a neatly organized table of venues with publication counts The extension is lightweight, respects your privacy, and only accesses information when you explicitly activate it on a Google Scholar profile page. Discover publication patterns and gain insights that aren't immediately visible from standard Google Scholar profiles!
Altmetric for Pubmed and Google Scholar
Get Altmetric score for research papers in Google Scholar and Pubmed search results Using this extension, researchers can get Altmetric score for research papers in Google Scholar and PubMed search results. Altmetric score is an indicator of how impactful and influential, a particular paper is. It is complementary to traditional, citation-based metrics. Altmetric score can help researchers understand where and why a piece of research is being discussed and shared, both among other scholars and in the public sphere. For e.g., they can see how a particular paper is being covered in the news, blogs and Twitter.
Google Scholar Author Highlighter
Highlights first-author, second-author, co-first-author and last-author papers on Google Scholar profile pages This extension automatically scans your Google Scholar profile and highlights papers by your authorship role. It detects and color-codes when you are: Key Features: 📊 Authorship Metrics: Real-time tracking of h-index, i10-index, and citations specifically for your highlighted papers. 📅 Year Filter: Dynamically filter publications and metrics by specific year ranges. 🎯 Focus Mode: Toggle visibility to hide non-relevant papers and focus on your primary works. ✨ Name Spotlighting: Automatically identifies and highlights your name in author lists. 🛠️ Integrated UI: A native-feeling control panel injected directly into your Google Scholar sidebar. If you like this extension, you can buy me a coffee ☕️ here: https://buymeacoffee.com/ntudy
Rockstar Scholar
Researchers, Scientists, and Engineers! Do you need help tracking citations on your papers? If so, this application is for you... If you visit your Google Scholar profile and have so many great papers that you can't tell which ones have new citations since your last visit, you're a Rockstar Scholar 🎸 Features: (1) Track citation changes for up to 500 papers on a Google Scholar profile page. (2) Data synced across browsers via your browser's data sync (if you're logged in). (3) Selectively clear citation updates or let them accumulate over time. (4) Auto-loads all papers on your home profile — no more clicking 'Show More'. (5) Sort your entire publication list by citation trend — find your rising stars with one click. (6) Runs on any Chromium browser. To set up Rockstar Scholar on a Google Scholar profile page: 1- Install the browser extension. 2- Go to a Google Scholar profile and click the top banner to set it as your Rockstar Scholar homepage. 3- Wait for the citations to roll in. 4- Check back to your Rockstar Scholar homepage to see which papers increased or decreased. 5- Clear the reported citation count changes at the click of a button, or let them accumulate over time.
Google Scholar Venue Ranker (GSVR)
Adds DBLP-verified CORE/SJR venue ranks, raw GSVR scores, completeness diagnostics, and reports to Scholar profiles. Google Scholar Venue Ranker (GSVR) is an open-source Chrome extension that adds conference and journal ranking context directly to Google Scholar profile pages. Google Scholar is excellent for browsing publications, but it does not make venue quality easy to inspect. This is especially important in Computer Science, Electrical Engineering, and related conference-driven fields, where the publication venue often provides useful context for evaluating research contributions. GSVR overlays easy-to-read ranking badges beside publications on a Scholar profile. For conference papers, it shows historical CORE conference ranks such as A*, A, B, and C, selecting the appropriate ranking snapshot by publication year. For journal papers, it shows SCImago Journal Rank quartiles such as Q1, Q2, Q3, and Q4. Unlike simple text-matching tools, GSVR uses a conservative DBLP-backed ranking pipeline to help identify venues more reliably instead of relying only on editable Google Scholar venue text. Ambiguous, missing, workshop, demo, poster, and short-paper cases are handled carefully to avoid showing misleading ranks. The extension also includes a Research Quality Score panel, a compact Venue Ranker sidebar, interactive filters, local venue lookup through Venue Explorer, and export options for PDF summaries, full audit reports, HTML, and CSV files. GSVR is designed for researchers, students, reviewers, hiring committees, and academic evaluators who want faster, clearer, and more transparent venue-ranking context while reviewing Google Scholar profiles.