This document describes how to index websites using Google Scholar academic papers. It's written for webmasters who want to incorporate their papers into Google Scholar's search results. Detailed technical information is useful if you are trying to fix site indexing errors or if you need to verify that the article hosting product is compatible with Google and Google Scholar services.
If you are a personal writer, uploading your thesis to your website is a good idea, for example www.example.edu/~professor/jpdr2009.pdf; and link to your publication page Please add, for example www.example.edu /~professor/publications.html.
However! Google's search robot usually finds your thesis within a few weeks and includes it in Google Scholar.
If it does not work, (1) Read the more detailed technical guide of this document or (2) make sure that the repository of your institution is set to index on Google Scholar. there
For college knowledge bases, we recommend that you host the paper using the latest version of Eprints (eprints.org), Digital Commons (digitalcommons.bepress.com), or DSpace (dspace.org) software .
If you are using a less common host product or service, or older version, please read this complete document and make sure that the site complies with our technical guidelines.
If you are publishing a small number of journals, consider using one of the established journal hosting services such as Atypon or Highwire. Aggregators (such as JSTOR and SciELO) that host many journals on one website are also usually available, but please contact the aggregator to make sure that Google Scholar supports full-text indexing . Alternatively, if you have technical expertise to manage your own website, we recommend that you download the Open Logging System (OJS) software from the Public Knowledge Project (PKP) .
If you are using a small journal hosting service or if you are managing your own custom website, please read the entire document and make sure that your site complies with our technical guidelines .
Penguin is the code name of Google's algorithm. The latest version focuses on the internal link to the site. Its main purpose is to reduce the ranking of sites that violate Google's webmaster guidelines. Using black hat technology such as hidden or keyword padding violates these guidelines.
The search engine warned explicitly. When you visit Google or Bing's Webmaster Guidelines, there are clear instructions on how to submit and rank your site. There is no priority submission, no special relationships or special treatment for whom. In addition, search rankings are inherently unstable, as many dynamic variables are involved. If you search "search engine optimization company" in Washington DC, then run 4 hours south to the Roanoke, Virginia and run the same queries, sorting entirely different results or totally different results.
A search engine like Google will make webmaster 's suggestions to solve the problem. For example, Google's webmaster guidelines recommend using the rel = "canonical" hyperlink details in the preferred URL. That page is considered an actual page and the crawler is not misunderstood. At the same time, web developers need to use 301 to redirect to different pages. It regularly redirects users to priority pages. So, whatever URL your customer type is, they may log in to your chosen page.