768 research outputs found
Coherent measures of the impact of co-authors in peer review journals and in proceedings publications
This paper focuses on the coauthor effect in different types of publications,
usually not equally respected in measuring research impact. {\it A priori}
unexpected relationships are found between the total coauthor core value,
, of a leading investigator (LI), and the related values for their
publications in either peer review journals () or in proceedings (). A
surprisingly linear relationship is found: . Furthermore, another relationship is found concerning the measure
of the total number of citations, , i.e. the surface of the citation
size-rank histogram up to . Another linear relationship exists :
. These empirical findings
coefficients (0.4 and 1.36) are supported by considerations based on an
empirical power law found between the number of joint publications of an author
and the rank of a coauthor. Moreover, a simple power law relationship is found
between and the number () of coauthors of a LI: ; the power law exponent depends on the type ( or ) of
publications. These simple relations, at this time limited to publications in
physics, imply that coauthors are a "more positive measure" of a principal
investigator role, in both types of scientific outputs, than the Hirsch index
could indicate. Therefore, to scorn upon co-authors in publications, in
particular in proceedings, is incorrect. On the contrary, the findings suggest
an immediate test of coherence of scientific authorship in scientific policy
processes.Comment: 22 pages; 2 Tables; 6 Figures; 38 references; prepared for Physica
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