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You can do it with scholar package. Follow the steps. 1) Find the article in scholar.google.de 2) Click on one the authors registered in google scholar, this will show the page with all articles of that author 3) Click on the title of the article you want, this will show the profile for the article.
Citations for either of the papers will then count towards the "master" manuscript. It does not matter for your citation count if people cite the preprint or the final paper (although of course the latter is the proper way to do it, and other people - most importantly reviewers or journal copy editors - are likely to insist on it).
I couldn't find a way to export all citations from My Library (it seems to only work one page at a time), but it's possible to save all citations from the edit mode of My Citations: Log in to https://scholar.google.ca; Click My Citations; Click the leftmost checkbox on the bar at the top of the list of citations:
If you are wanting to stick with Google Scholar your best bet is to use a plug-in like Zotero, which will let you quickly capture all the metadata (and potentially readily available .pdf's) of results on a page-by-page basis. If you start pulling too much metadata too quickly from Google Scholar you will trip their bot detection captcha's.
Google scholar is unable to identify [some citations to my work] because my name in the references of article has been written differently. But, I doubt Google works this way, because numerous mistakes appear in references throughout the literature. Perhaps this issue will resolve itself over time as Google has more time to crawl.
I have a paper that I uploaded to arXiv and google scholar listed it as a publication. The paper cites a number of my papers that are already published. However, Google scholar doesn't add arxiv citations to the already published papers.
In Google Scholar, I can view the number of citations of each article, but this includes self-citations. Is there a way to view the number of non-self citations? In this tweet from 2019, the author suggests a way to calculate this number for a specific article. But is there a way to do this automatically for all my articles?
It is a Windows application, which allows you to specify queries and then goes to Google Scholar to retrieve and sort the references, citations, etc. Besides computing h-index and a host of other bibliometric indices, it allows you to produce reports from your searches and this is what you seem to be after.
Google Scholar may mark citation counts with an asterisk (*), meaning: This "Cited by" count includes citations to the following articles in Scholar. The ones marked * may be different from the article in the profile. How can I validate citations in my Google Scholar account that are genuine but are marked with a *?
If Google Scholar later creates a separate entry because it did not realize that the two are the same, you can do the merge at that time. If Google Scholar correctly recognizes your paper's journal and preprint version as the same paper, then (usually) citations should automatically get added to the existing entry.