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Disruption Index (CD-Index)×Patent–Paper Citation Linkage (NPL)×
분야계량서지학계량서지학
계열Process / pipelineProcess / pipeline
기원 연도20171997
창시자Russell J. Funk & Jason Owen-Smith; Lingfei Wu, Dashun Wang & James A. EvansFrancis Narin, Kimberly S. Hamilton & Dominic Olivastro
유형Citation-network pipeline for classifying contributions as disruptive or consolidatingCitation-linkage pipeline connecting patents to scientific literature
원전Funk, R. J., & Owen-Smith, J. (2017). A Dynamic Network Measure of Technological Change. Management Science, 63(3), 791-817. DOI ↗Narin, F., Hamilton, K. S., & Olivastro, D. (1997). The increasing linkage between U.S. technology and public science. Research Policy, 26(3), 317-330. DOI ↗
별칭CD Index, Consolidation-Disruption Index, CD5 Index, Disruptiveness MeasureScience Linkage Analysis, Non-Patent Literature Analysis, NPL Citation Analysis, Patent-to-Science Citation Linkage
관련33
요약The disruption index, or CD index, classifies a scientific paper or patent by how the work that cites it treats the work it built on. Introduced by Russell Funk and Jason Owen-Smith in 2017 as a dynamic network measure of technological change, and popularized for science by Lingfei Wu, Dashun Wang, and James Evans in 2019, it asks a simple structural question: when later researchers cite a focal work, do they also keep citing that work's own references, or do they cite the focal work instead of its predecessors? If subsequent work cites the focal item but largely ignores its references, the item has disrupted its field, eclipsing what came before; if subsequent work cites both the item and its references together, the item has consolidated existing knowledge. The index runs from -1 (purely consolidating) to +1 (purely disrupting) and has become a standard tool for measuring whether contributions push science in new directions or deepen established lines.Patent–paper citation linkage measures how strongly technology draws on science by analyzing the non-patent literature, or NPL, references that appear on patents. When a patent cites a scientific journal article rather than another patent, it leaves a traceable thread connecting an invention to the research it built on. Francis Narin, Kimberly Hamilton, and Dominic Olivastro's landmark 1997 study traced these threads at national scale and found that the citation linkage between U.S. patents and scientific papers was growing rapidly, that the cited science was overwhelmingly public, authored in universities and government laboratories, and that this linkage offered a quantitative measure of the contribution of public science to industrial technology. The resulting science-linkage indicator distinguishes science-intensive technologies from incremental ones and underpins studies of how publicly funded research feeds private innovation.
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ScholarGate방법 비교: Disruption Index (CD-Index) · Patent–Paper Citation Linkage (NPL). 2026-06-25에 다음에서 검색함: https://scholargate.app/ko/compare