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I couldn't find a way to export all citations from My Library (it seems to only work one page at a time), but it's possible to save all citations from the edit mode of My Citations: Log in to https://scholar.google.ca; Click My Citations; Click the leftmost checkbox on the bar at the top of the list of citations:
If you are wanting to stick with Google Scholar your best bet is to use a plug-in like Zotero, which will let you quickly capture all the metadata (and potentially readily available .pdf's) of results on a page-by-page basis. If you start pulling too much metadata too quickly from Google Scholar you will trip their bot detection captcha's.
1. Sometimes a paper appears as a pre-print first, and then in a peer-reviewed form, possibly with more authors. And people might cite one or the other, and sometimes both. Google Scholar can probably see that the papers are still similar. How does it handle the citations though?
Another option is to use the Publish or Perish software (which functions as a front-end to Google scholar), which allows you to use the "Lookup citations" feature to get an exportable list of all the citing papers found through Google Scholar. This list will contain year, title, authors, citation count etc for all the citing papers.
In Google Scholar, I can view the number of citations of each article, but this includes self-citations. Is there a way to view the number of non-self citations? In this tweet from 2019, the author suggests a way to calculate this number for a specific article. But is there a way to do this automatically for all my articles?
It is a Windows application, which allows you to specify queries and then goes to Google Scholar to retrieve and sort the references, citations, etc. Besides computing h-index and a host of other bibliometric indices, it allows you to produce reports from your searches and this is what you seem to be after.
I'm using both Semantic Scholar and Google Scholar to keep track of citations to some of my papers. For some papers, I notice that citation counts across these two sites don't match. So, some papers that cite the paper X appear only on Semantic Scholar, or Google Scholar but not on both. What causes this discrepancy?
1. It looks like there is no direct way. You could choose the account with the most citations and then manually cite the other publications from the account with less citations. Also, you could try to export the citations from the smaller account to your hard drive and deactivate that account. Then rebuild the other scholar account over time.
3. There is an issue where Google Scholar does not promptly add the full version of a paper to its index if a pre-print version of the same article was previously found. See the discussion below: Do all preprint servers have the non-updating issue in google scholar. The funny thing is that the final version of the article will show up in a ...
1. It is possible that citations to your work are not recognized by Google Scholar because of errors in (or incompleteness of) the reference string. Such 'stray' citations can be corrected, see Anne-Wil Harzing's guide to correcting stray citations in Google Scholar. Note that the same problem occurs in all citation databases to some extent.