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Studies in scientific collaboration Part III. Professionalization and the natural history of modern scientific co-authorship

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Abstract

A review of selected parameters of the growth of scientific collaboration over the last century provides further confirmation of the dependency of teamwork on the increasing professionalization of science. Analysis reveals significant inaccuracies in current views of the recency and prevalence of collaborative research, and affords a more correct picture of twentieth century developments. A change in the growth rate of the practice of scientific collaboration at about the time of World War I, and indications of associations of teamwork with financial support and research publication in leading journals are discussed. Characteristics of the natural history of scientific collaboration signify that collaboration reflects relationships of dependency within a hierarchically stratified professional community, and serves as a means of professional mobility. As such, it continues to fulfil its original functions.

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Notes and references

  1. D. deB. BEAVER, R. ROSEN, Studies in Scientific Collaboration Part I, The Professional Origins of Scientific Co-authorshipScientometrics, 1 (1978) No.1, 65–84. and Studies in Scientific Collaboration Part II, Scientific Co-authorship, Research Productivity and Visibility in the French Scientific Elite, 1799–1830;Scientometrics, 1 (1978) No.2, 133–149.

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  8. The percentage displayed byZeitschrift may reflect either the shift of center of gravity of research to the U.S., or the possibility it isn't a core journal. Absent from these statistics are French journals, which we have not examined. Our theory, however, would lead us to predict that the relatively depressed state of science in France “in the age of the scientific state” would result in its best journals exhibiting a below average frequency of teamwork.

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  35. In Table 3, journals are arranged by subjects according to the list headings in the 1970 Guide to theScience Citation Index published by the Institute for Scientific Information, Philadelphia, Pa. The number of authors in every journal is taken from a printout of the 1970Science Citation Index Tapes, which contains statistics of the number of articles published in the source journals processed in theSCI. It is to be noted that the count has been edited; anonymous articles have been subtracted from the total number of articles in the journal and do not affect the average. For permission to publish this table, grateful acknowledgement is due to the Institute for Scientific Information (ISI), and to Prof. D. deS. PRICE of Yale University, who first utilized this table, and kindly made it available to us. For further information about SCI, see E. GARFIELD, Science Citation Index, a New Concept in Indexing,Science, 144 (1964) 649–654.

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  36. For other distinctions between science and technology, see D. deS. PRICE, The Difference Between Science and Technology, published by the Thomas Alva Edison Foundation 1968; M. KRANZBERG, The Disunity of Science-Technology,American Scientists, 56 (Spring, 1968) 21–34, and N. W. STORER,op. cit., p. 91–97.

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Beaver, D.d., Rosen, R. Studies in scientific collaboration Part III. Professionalization and the natural history of modern scientific co-authorship. Scientometrics 1, 231–245 (1979). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02016308

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