Citation mining is when you use a relevant book or article to find more resources on the same topic.
Everything published about a topic is part of the scholarly conversation. This scholarly conversation happens over many years as more resources continue to be published. These resources can fit into a timeline based on their publication date. You can move forwards and backwards on the scholarly communication timeline through citation mining.
You can use citation mining to move forward in time and find new resources that cite your current resource. You can use citation mining to go backward in time and find the old resources that your current resource cites.
When you use citation mining to move backwards in time, you are looking for resources that your current resource cites.
You can find older related resources in two different ways:
How to Mine for Citations:
When you use citation mining to move forwards in time, you are looking for more recently published works that cite your current resource.
This can help you also with finding out which items are seminal works on your topic. If a resource is really important, it will be cited by many later works!
Scopus is an index of articles and other publications. Scopus does not index every article; some journals are not included, and those citations will not be shown. These journals aren't omitted only for low quality; high quality journals might just not be on Scopus's list.
However, using Scopus can give you a good idea of how highly cited an article is.
You can visit Scopus by finding "Scopus" in the Database & e-Reference link under Library Resources on the Marx Library homepage.
You can citation mine in Google Scholar. You move forward in time by selecting the "Cited by #" button below each listed article.
You can continue moving forward in the scholarly conversation timeline by continuing to click on the "Cited by #" below the list of new articles you are presented.
Google Scholar indexes a very large range of resources. Not all articles listed will be from quality journals. The number of citations are one clue to the quality of that article. An article with many citations is more likely to be useful and important. What number of citations is "many" depends on your discipline.