Citation Indices
Citation indexing enables you to find papers which have cited a particular author in their references. Through citation searching you can follow the development of an idea or theory through the literature. For example, someone writing about evolution today might well make a reference to Darwin. If you were interested in seeing how Darwin's work has been used by other authors you can use citation searching to find the recent papers which refer to him.
In the context of RAE, citation searching can be used to find out the extent to which your own work has been cited by other authors. This will give some idea of the impact of your work on the broader research community.
Citation searching can be done on the Web of Science database; which covers the Science Citation Index, Social Science Citation Index and Arts and Humanities Citation Index. Each article in these databases includes a list of the references that are cited in the article. These can be searched to find patterns of citation.
When performing a citation search it is generally best to search for an author name. Type the surname followed by first initial as shown below:
sanderson a*
Use an asterisk (*) to find the largest number of possible alternatives for the author: they may have published papers as A. Sanderson, Andrew Sanderson, or even A.E. Sanderson if they have a middle initial. You can restrict to a particular year if you want - at the full search screen choose your year(s). This will find you, for example, all the papers published in 1999 that refer to the Sanderson's work, but not all the papers that refer to Sanderson's 1999 papers. You can restrict to Sanderson's 1999 papers by typing this date when you get to the cited search form (in the cited year box).
It makes no difference whether or not the author is listed as first author of the paper: Web of Science will find citations for all authors regardless of order listed.
Beware, also, of variations on names that may be used on publications for an author. For example: the author Tony Smith may have published papers as Tony Smith or as Anthony Smith (smith t or smith a).
For authors with common names, you may find lots of references; not all of which will be the appropriate person. It's worth checking the author's address if this happens. For example; if you are searching for R. Gee, you will find a number of authors based at Leeds, Michigan State University and the University of California. Only the Leeds author would be the one you were (presumably) looking for. You can check an author's address by following the link from the database to the reference for their paper.