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There are at least two ways of defining a h-index analogue for Stack Overflow. One of them substitutes answer scores for citation counts.

An alternative h-index, as suggested by Mike McCaughan, uses the number of duplicates that have the parent question as target instead of the answer score. That is a less straightforward metric, but it arguably provides a closer match to the academia h-index.

There are at least two ways of defining a h-index analogue for Stack Overflow. One of them substitutes answer scores for citation counts.

An alternative h-index, as suggested by Mike McCaughan, uses the number of duplicates that have the parent question as target instead of the answer score. That is a less straightforward metric, but it arguably provides a closer match to the academia h-index.

There are at least two ways of defining a h-index analogue for Stack Overflow. One of them substitutes answer scores for citation counts.

An alternative h-index, as suggested by Mike McCaughan, uses the number of duplicates that have the parent question as target instead of the answer score. That is a less straightforward metric, but it arguably provides a closer match to the academia h-index.

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There are at least two ways of defining a h-index analogue for Stack Overflow. One of them substitutes answer scores for citation counts.

An alternative h-index, as suggested by Mike McCaughan, uses the number of duplicates that have the parent question as target instead of the answer score. That is a less straightforward metric, but it arguably provides a closer match to the academia h-index.