And another one. There are many more. -- Christian Zimmermann FIGUGEGL! Economic Research Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis P.O. Box 442 St. Louis MO 63166-0442 USA http://ideas.repec.org/zimm/ ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Thu, 8 Sep 2011 13:05:01 +0200 From: Peter Huber <Peter.Huber@wifo.ac.at> To: Christian Zimmermann <zimmermann@stlouisfed.org> Subject: Question concerning monthly statistics Dear Mr. Zimmermann I seem to have a problem with the citations on my account. Last month the number of citations recorded has gone down from 76 to 71 and checking in my account I seem to only have 13 left, despite the IDEAS citation analysis showing many more THE FAQ page says 1. This can happen when you remove items from your profile, when a publisher removes some items from the database (either refering or citing), or when we notice that two citing or cited papers are different versions of the same work. It can also happen that we remove wrongly attributed citations (something you can also do: log into your profile, then click on "citations" and "identified"). -I have not removed any items from the data base -I am also not aware of any wrongly attributed citations in my list at IDEAS Have so many publishers deleted items referring to my work, or has something gone wrong? Can I do anything about this reduction? Thanks Peter Huber -- ___________________________________________________________________ Österreichisches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung WIFO Name: Peter Huber Postadresse: Postfach 91 Tel.: +43-1-7982601-404 A-1103 Wien Fax: +43-1-7989386 Österreich Mail: Peter.Huber@wifo.ac.at Standort: Arsenal Objekt 20 http://www.wifo.ac.at/ A-1030 Wien For downloadable recent working papers and journal articles see: http://ideas.repec.org/e/phu175.html For downloadable studies see: http://www.wifo.ac.at/wwa/jsp/index.jsp?&fid=18 Christian Zimmermann <zimmermann@stlouisfed.org> schrieb am 07.09.2011 13:54:41:
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[RePEc] Your monthly statistics
Christian Zimmermann
an:
huber
07.09.2011 13:54
Peter Huber,
this is a monthly message to inform you about the visibility of your works through RePEc. This message also contains information on how to update your profile.
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Watch further down in this message for new citations to your works we have uncovered.
Your ranking analysis, along with links to your profile pages on the various RePEc services, is available at: http://ideas.repec.org/cgi-bin/rank.cgi?phu175&rAXo
This link is valid only for a month. You can directly check for new items you could add to your profile here: http://authors.repec.org/?login=huber@wifo.ac.at
Your profile currently contains 81 items, among them 43 papers, 39 articles. Below are some traffic statistics for all these items, as provided by LogEc. More details for each of your works are available directly at http://logec.repec.org/RAS/phu175.htm
Abstract File views downloads Last month 81 24 Previous month 110 45 Last 3 months 268 103 Last 12 months 1239 494 Since start 6571 2194
We have found the following citations to your works during the last month:
- Peter Huber, 2004. "Inter-regional Mobility in Europe. A Note on the Cross-Country Evidence," WIFO Working Papers 221, WIFO.
cited in: ** - Silaghi, Monica Ioana & Ghatak, Subrata, 2011. "Why do not They Move from Rural to Urban Areas? Inter-Regional Migration in Romania," Journal for Economic Forecasting, Institute for Economic Forecasting, vol. 0(1), pages 143-158, March.
- Peter Huber & Michael Pfaffermayr, 2010. "Testing for Conditional Convergence in Variance and Skewness: The Firm Size Distribution Revisited," Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, Department of Economics, University of Oxford, vol. 72 (5), pages 648-668, October.
cited in: ** - Peter Huber & Harald Oberhofer & Michael Pfaffermayr, 2011. "Job Creation and the Intra-distribution Dynamics of the Firm Size Distribution," WIFO Working Papers 395, WIFO.
- Peter Huber, 1997. "Stock market returns in thin markets: evidence from the Vienna Stock Exchange," Applied Financial Economics, Taylor and Francis Journals, vol. 7(5), pages 493-498.
cited in: ** - Alexandros E. Milionis & Evangelia Papanagiotou, 2008. "A Note on the Use of Moving Average Trading Rules to Test For Weak from Efficiency in Capital Markets," Working Papers 91, Bank of Greece.
** - Graham Smith & Hyun-Jung Ryoo, 2003. "Variance ratio tests of the random walk hypothesis for European emerging stock markets," European Journal of Finance, Taylor and Francis Journals, vol. 9(3), pages 290-300.
** - Twm Evans, 2006. "Efficiency tests of the UK financial futures markets and the impact of electronic trading systems," Applied Financial Economics, Taylor and Francis Journals, vol. 16(17), pages 1273-1283.
** - Paresh Kumar Narayan, 2005. "Are the Australian and New Zealand stock prices nonlinear with a unit root?," Applied Economics, Taylor and Francis Journals, vol. 37 (18), pages 2161-2166.
** - Paresh Narayan & Arti Prasad, 2007. "Mean Reversion in Stock Prices: New Evidence from Panel Unit Root Tests for Seventeen European Countries," Economics Bulletin, AccessEcon, vol. 3(34), pages 1-6.
** - Alt, Raimund & Fortin, Ines & Weinberger, Simon, 2002. "The Day-of-the-Week Effect Revisited: An Alternative Testing Approach," Economics Series 127, Institute for Advanced Studies.
** - Qaiser Munir & Kasim Mansur, 2009. "Is Malaysian Stock Market Efficient? Evidence from Threshold Unit Root Tests," Economics Bulletin, AccessEcon, vol. 29(2), pages 1359-1370.
** - Marcos Alvarez DÃaz & Lucy Amigo Dobaño & Francisco Rodrà guez de Prado, . "Taxing on Housing: A Welfare Evaluation of the Spanish Personal Income Tax," Studies on the Spanish Economy 142, FEDEA.
Note that your profile on IDEAS may not yet reflect these new citations due to the rotation schedule for the web site update. If any of these citations does not appear to be correct, please log into your profile, and then click on citations to make appropriate adjustments. You may also find additional citations to approve for which we had a lower match confidence.
I encourage you to check from time to time on RePEc for new items in the database you can claim authorship for, and keep your contact information current. This is the only way to add new works to your profile, this is not done automatically. Just use the direct link http://authors.repec.org/?login=huber@wifo.ac.at
New items are added continuously, be it from existing working papers series and journals or from new ones contributing to the database. And encourage your colleagues to do so as well. There are now over 29,000 authors registered through RePEc!
If you have questions, consult the FAQ mentioned above. But do not hesitate to contact me for any question and encourage others to register with RePEc!
Christian Zimmermann RePEc Team Economic Research Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis