Scientific collaboration network

Scientific collaboration network is a social network where nodes are scientists and links are co-authorships as the latter is one of the most well documented forms of scientific collaboration.[1] It is an undirected, scale-free network where the degree distribution follows a power law with an exponential cutoff – most authors are sparsely connected while a few authors are intensively connected.[2] The network has an assortative nature – hubs tend to link to other hubs and low-degree nodes tend to link to low-degree nodes. Assortativity is not structural, meaning that it is not a consequence of the degree distribution, but it is generated by some process that governs the network’s evolution.[3]

  1. ^ Glanzel, Wolfgang (2004). Handbook of Quantitative Science and Technology Research. Springer Netherlands. ISBN 978-1-4020-2755-0.
  2. ^ Ying, Ding (January 2011). "Scientific collaboration and endorsement: Network analysis of coauthorship and citation networks". Journal of Informetrics. 5 (1): 188. doi:10.1016/j.joi.2010.10.008. PMC 3041944. PMID 21344057.
  3. ^ Barabasi, Albert-Laszlo (November 2012). Network Science. Archived from the original on 2015-01-18. Retrieved 2014-05-24.

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