7,024 research outputs found
On the relationship between interdisciplinarity and scientific impact
This paper analyzes the effect of interdisciplinarity on the scientific
impact of individual papers. Using all the papers published in Web of Science
in 2000, we define the degree of interdisciplinarity of a given paper as the
percentage of its cited references made to journals of other disciplines. We
show that, although for all disciplines combined there is no clear correlation
between the level of interdisciplinarity of papers and their citation rates,
there are nonetheless some disciplines in which a higher level of
interdisciplinarity is related to a higher citation rates. For other
disciplines, citations decline as interdisciplinarity grows. One characteristic
is visible in all disciplines: highly disciplinary and highly interdisciplinary
papers have a low scientific impact. This suggests that there might be an
optimum of interdisciplinarity beyond which the research is too dispersed to
find its niche and under which it is too mainstream to have high impact.
Finally, the relationship between interdisciplinarity and scientific impact is
highly determined by the citation characteristics of the disciplines involved:
papers citing citation intensive disciplines are more likely to be cited by
those disciplines and, hence, obtain higher citation scores than papers citing
non citation intensive disciplines.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, 1 table. Forthcoming in JASIS
Bibliometric Analysis of Research on Mental Health in the Workplace in Canada 1991-2002
This paper uses the Medline biomedical papers database to measure scientific production on mental health in the workplace (MHWP) during the 1991-2002 period at the world, Canadian, provincial, urban, institutional and researcher levels. The level of scientific output has doubled at the world level and tripled at the Canadian level during the last 12 years. At the provincial level, Ontario, Quebec, British Columbia and Alberta are leading in absolute number of papers. Ontario largely dominates both in terms of output and on a per capita basis. At the level of cities, Toronto and Montreal are the largest producers of papers on MHWP. The most important institutions in terms of papers on MHWP are McMaster University, Université de Montréal, the University of Toronto, the University of British Columbia and the University of Western Ontario. The universities with the largest number of active researchers in MHWP are McMaster University, Université Laval and York University
Spin and chiral stiffness of the XY spin glass in two dimensions
We analyze the zero-temperature behavior of the XY Edwards-Anderson spin
glass model on a square lattice. A newly developed algorithm combining exact
ground-state computations for Ising variables embedded into the planar spins
with a specially tailored evolutionary method, resulting in the genetic
embedded matching (GEM) approach, allows for the computation of numerically
exact ground states for relatively large systems. This enables a thorough
re-investigation of the long-standing questions of (i) extensive degeneracy of
the ground state and (ii) a possible decoupling of spin and chiral degrees of
freedom in such systems. The new algorithm together with appropriate choices
for the considered sets of boundary conditions and finite-size scaling
techniques allows for a consistent determination of the spin and chiral
stiffness scaling exponents.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, proceedings of the HFM2006 conference, to appear
in a special issue of J. Phys.: Condens. Matte
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