How are academic age, productivity and collaboration related to citing behavior of researchers?
Sta\v{s}a Milojevi\'c

TL;DR
This study analyzes referencing behaviors across five scientific fields over 50 years, revealing that researcher seniority does not significantly influence citation patterns, and highlighting the role of productivity and collaboration in advancing research frontiers.
Contribution
It introduces improved bibliometric methods to measure research front speed, disambiguate lead authors, and decouple productivity and collaboration effects.
Findings
References per article have increased over 50 years.
Senior and junior researchers cite similarly, with high MPI indicating cutting-edge work.
More productive and collaborative researchers push the research front more effectively.
Abstract
References are an essential component of research articles and therefore of scientific communication. In this study we investigate referencing (citing) behavior in five diverse fields (astronomy, mathematics, robotics, ecology and economics) based on 213,756 core journal articles. At the macro level we find: (a) a steady increase in the number of references per article over the period studied (50 years), which in some fields is due to a higher rate of usage, while in others reflects longer articles and (b) an increase in all fields in the fraction of older, foundational references since the 1980s, with no obvious change in citing patterns associated with the introduction of the Internet. At the meso level we explore current (2006-2010) referencing behavior of different categories of authors (21,562 total) within each field, based on their academic age, productivity and collaborative…
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