Where do you get your articles from?
We get full text articles and metadata from many different sources, primarily from indexing agreements with publishers (Wiley, Karger, Thieme, Sage, BMJ, and many more) and from different open sources such as unpaywall, pubmed, fatcat, various preprint servers, university repositories, open access journals, and more. Here is a tentative list: Wiley Karger Rockefeller University Press Cambridge University Press Future Science Group Thieme Sage BMJ Frontiers IUCR The Royal Society SciELO bioRxivFew readersscite is missing citations
scite processes millions of full-text scientific articles in order to extract citation statements. While we have processed many millions of articles, there still many more to go. If your article is missing citations it might be for one of the following reasons: 1) We have not yet processed the article and thus don't have the citation. We are actively ingesting millions of scientific articles (500k PDFs per day), the article or citations might be in the queue already. 2) We have procesFew readersscite Coverage
scite Data in a Nutshell We have a robust dataset of millions of full-text articles we access through indexing agreements with publishers and Open Access content. This data is further linked with author, affiliation, and topic metadata and can be used for a variety of insights to support your needs. In addition, scite has over 1.9 billion unique citations. scite also provides comprehensive coverage of scholarly metadata information such as authors, affiliations, journals, publishers, andFew readers