- When I read the title, I thought “Surely this Larry cannot be more cited than the famous F. D. C. Willard”. But then I read the article and it turns out that’s very specifically the record Larry broke. - Link? - Thanks! 
- Reese Richardson, a graduate student in metascience and computational biology - …ladies - Is he also very stretchy? 
 
 
 
 
- It feels very strange to me that any serious citation counter would index ResearchGate, which AFAIK don’t have any check before publishing a preprint. It is basically a more reputable vixra. - But then again citation count, or “impact factor”, are in general quite bad to determine the quality of one’s research, and often can be easily manipulated even through legitimist means: simply publish more mediocre papers. 
- What if Larry spent all his days daydreaming about numerical analysis and the crisis of replicability of scoentific articles, but all he could say was “meow”? 
- I read “the most edited cat” and know I don’t know anymore 
- I read it as “world’s most excited cat” and was confused on how someone is supposed to interpret from that face as the cat being “excited” 😅 - This face is as excited as a cat can get. 
 
- I 'member hearing that this “practice” started when a lone researcher tried to publish an articule but was rejected 'cause it was policy that all submissions needed a co-author… and it went trough, he was able to publish this and others really good articules. - So, i dont see anything bad here, mr whiskers can be remembered by future generations with no harm done. - This is actually gaming the Google Scholar system instead of harmless ones like Willard. 
- If Furry McFluffface contributes to an article by giving moral support and occasionally walking across the keyboard, it’s only fair to make him co-author. 
 








