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Collaboration Distance and Erdős Number Analysis×Relative Specialization / Activity Index×
분야계량서지학계량서지학
계열Process / pipelineProcess / pipeline
기원 연도20011986
창시자M. E. J. Newman (collaboration networks); Rodrigo de Castro & Jerrold Grossman (Erdős number)J. Davidson Frame (activity index); András Schubert & Tibor Braun (relative indicators)
유형Network-distance pipeline over co-authorship graphsNormalized bibliometric indicator of revealed research specialization
원전Newman, M. E. J. (2001). The structure of scientific collaboration networks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 98(2), 404-409. DOI ↗Schubert, A., & Braun, T. (1986). Relative indicators and relational charts for comparative assessment of publication output and citation impact. Scientometrics, 9(5-6), 281-291. DOI ↗
별칭Erdős Number Analysis, Co-Authorship Distance, Collaboration Geodesic Analysis, Scientific Small-World AnalysisActivity Index, Relative Specialization Index, Revealed Comparative Advantage in Science, Attractivity Index
관련33
요약Collaboration distance analysis measures how closely connected scientists are through chains of co-authorship. Two researchers who have written a paper together are at distance 1; if they share a co-author but never wrote together, distance 2; and so on. The most famous instance is the Erdős number, the collaboration distance to the prolific mathematician Paul Erdős, popularized by the Erdős Number Project and analyzed by Rodrigo de Castro and Jerrold Grossman. M. E. J. Newman's landmark 2001 PNAS study generalized this idea, constructing large co-authorship networks across physics, biomedicine, and computer science and showing that they are 'small worlds': despite millions of authors, typical shortest paths are short and local clustering is high. Collaboration distance analysis thus characterizes the connectivity and reach of scientific communities through the geometry of their co-authorship graphs.The Relative Specialization Index and the closely related Activity Index measure how much a country, institution, or other unit concentrates its research effort in a given field relative to a global benchmark. The Activity Index, popularized by J. Davidson Frame in the 1970s, compares a unit's share of its own output devoted to a field against the world's share of output in that field: a value above 1 means the unit is more active (more specialized) in that field than the world average, and below 1 means less. András Schubert and Tibor Braun's relative-indicator framework formalized this family and introduced bounded, symmetric variants and 'relational charts' that pair publication activity with citation 'attractivity'. These indices are the scientometric analogue of revealed comparative advantage in trade and are central to national and institutional research-profiling.
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