Maguire, EamonnMontull, Javier MartinLouppe, GillesEnrico Bertini and Niklas Elmqvist and Thomas Wischgoll2016-06-092016-06-092016978-3-03868-014-7-https://doi.org/10.2312/eurovisshort.20161169https://diglib.eg.org:443/handle/10Measuring scholarly impact has been a topic of much interest in recent years. While many use the citation count as a primary indicator of a publications impact, the quality and impact of those citations will vary. Additionally, it is often difficult to see where a paper sits among other papers in the same research area. Questions we wished to answer through this visualization were: is a publication cited less than publications in the field?; is a publication cited by high or low impact publications?; and can we visually compare the impact of publications across a result set? In this work we address the above questions through a new visualization of publication impact. Our technique has been applied to the visualization of citation information in INSPIREHEP (www.inspirehep.net), the largest high energy physics publication repository.Visualization of Publication Impact10.2312/eurovisshort.20161169103-107