[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":184},["ShallowReactive",2],{"learn-geo-/en/learn/geo/authority-references-en":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"body":6,"description":144,"extension":145,"meta":146,"navigation":177,"path":178,"seo":179,"stem":182,"__hash__":183},"content_en/5.learn/geo/authority-references.md","Authority References",{"type":7,"value":8,"toc":136},"minimark",[9,22,27,30,41,49,62,66,89,93,117,121],[10,11,12,16,17,21],"p",{},[13,14,15],"strong",{},"TL;DR"," — A link to ",[18,19,20],"code",{},"pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov"," carries more weight than a link to an unknown blog. Pages that cite authoritative primary sources are treated as more reliable synthesisers. This is the web equivalent of citing peer-reviewed papers.",[23,24,26],"h2",{"id":25},"why-authority-references-matter-for-ai-engines","Why Authority References Matter for AI Engines",[10,28,29],{},"AI models are trained to recognise citation quality. Just as academic papers distinguish between peer-reviewed journals and blog posts, AI engines distinguish between authority-domain citations and low-domain links. A page that links to PubMed, the WHO, Reuters, or a university research paper is signalling that its claims are anchored in the highest-quality external verification available.",[10,31,32,33,40],{},"The ",[34,35,39],"a",{"href":36,"rel":37},"https://arxiv.org/abs/2311.09735",[38],"nofollow","Princeton GEO study (2024)"," specifically analysed external citation patterns in high-citation-rate content. Pages that cited authoritative primary sources — research papers, government data, major established publishers — were cited significantly more often than pages citing only other blogs or commercial websites. The mechanism is trust propagation: high-authority sources have high model trust scores, and linking to them transfers some of that trust to the citing page.",[10,42,43,44,48],{},"This is distinct from the general ",[34,45,47],{"href":46},"/learn/geo/external-references","External References"," signal. External References is about the presence of any credible external links. Authority References is about the specific quality of those links — the subset that points to the highest-authority domains.",[10,50,51,54,57,58,61],{},[13,52,53],{},"Qualifying authority domains:",[18,55,56],{},".gov",", ",[18,59,60],{},".edu",", Wikipedia, Reuters, BBC, AP News, Nature, PubMed, McKinsey, Gartner, Forrester, Deloitte, PwC, Bloomberg, Harvard Business Review, Statista.",[23,63,65],{"id":64},"how-to-implement","How to Implement",[67,68,69,73,76,86],"ul",{},[70,71,72],"li",{},"At minimum 1 authority domain link per article",[70,74,75],{},"Link to the specific study, page, or data source — not the homepage",[70,77,78,79,82,83],{},"Use the source's title as link text: ",[18,80,81],{},"[Princeton GEO Study (2024)](https://arxiv.org/abs/2311.09735)"," not ",[18,84,85],{},"[source]",[70,87,88],{},"Diversify authority sources — citing only one domain repeatedly is less effective than citing 3–4 different authority sources",[23,90,92],{"id":91},"common-mistakes","Common Mistakes",[67,94,95,105,111],{},[70,96,97,100,101,104],{},[13,98,99],{},"Linking to authority domains' homepages"," — ",[18,102,103],{},"[Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org)"," with no specific article provides no citation signal; link to the specific article",[70,106,107,110],{},[13,108,109],{},"Over-relying on the same authority source"," — citing only McKinsey for every business claim reduces diversity; mix sources",[70,112,113,116],{},[13,114,115],{},"Citing sources that have been retracted or significantly updated"," — always verify the source is still accurate and current when adding authority references",[23,118,120],{"id":119},"sources","Sources",[67,122,123,129],{},[70,124,125],{},[34,126,128],{"href":36,"rel":127},[38],"Princeton GEO Paper (2024) — external citations analysis",[70,130,131],{},[34,132,135],{"href":133,"rel":134},"https://developers.google.com/search/docs/fundamentals/creating-helpful-content",[38],"Google Quality Rater Guidelines — E-E-A-T",{"title":137,"searchDepth":138,"depth":138,"links":139},"",2,[140,141,142,143],{"id":25,"depth":138,"text":26},{"id":64,"depth":138,"text":65},{"id":91,"depth":138,"text":92},{"id":119,"depth":138,"text":120},"Outbound links to high-authority domains (.gov, .edu, Wikipedia, major publishers) that anchor your claims.","md",{"publishedAt":147,"badge":148,"type":150,"faq":151,"related":161,"cta":172},"2026-03-31",{"label":149},"Authority","guide",[152,155,158],{"question":153,"answer":154},"Is Wikipedia a good authority source?","Wikipedia is useful as a general reference because AI models are heavily trained on it and treat it as a neutral, well-cited source. However, Wikipedia itself cites primary sources — for strong authority signals, cite the primary source that Wikipedia references, not just the Wikipedia article itself.",{"question":156,"answer":157},"How do I find authority sources to cite for my topic?","For research claims: Google Scholar, PubMed, arXiv. For industry data: Gartner, Forrester, Statista, McKinsey. For regulatory or legal claims: .gov sources. For technical specifications: official documentation (schema.org, MDN, RFC documents). For statistics: the original study, not secondary sources that cite it.",{"question":159,"answer":160},"Does linking to paywalled content count as an authority reference?","Yes — paywalled content from high-authority sources (Nature, HBR, Bloomberg) still carries the authority signal even if AI crawlers can't read the full article. The domain authority is what matters. That said, where possible, prefer open-access versions (PubMed Central, arXiv) of research papers.",[162,164,168],{"title":47,"url":46,"description":163},"The broader signal of linking to any credible external sources.",{"title":165,"url":166,"description":167},"Data and Statistics","/learn/geo/data-and-statistics","How to cite the authority sources behind your statistical claims.",{"title":169,"url":170,"description":171},"Author Attribution","/learn/geo/author-attribution","How named author credentials compound with authority references for E-E-A-T.",{"title":173,"description":174,"label":175,"url":176},"Are your pages citing authoritative sources?","TrustData identifies pages with no authority-domain external links and surfaces which claims need stronger sourcing.","Audit my pages","https://app.trustdata.tech",true,"/learn/geo/authority-references",{"title":180,"description":181},"Authority References for AI Engines — GEO Optimisation Guide","A link to pubmed.nih.gov carries more weight than a link to an unknown blog. Pages citing authoritative primary sources are treated as more reliable by AI engines.","5.learn/geo/authority-references","ZtWl13rYGHFyvXcVwHjrxea1DLxM2CcObDKYfUaAKSw",1777026711543]