Exploration and Exploitation of Victorian Science in Darwin's Reading Notebooks
Jaimie Murdock, Colin Allen, Simon DeDeo

TL;DR
This study analyzes Darwin's reading habits using topic models and information theory, revealing a shift from exploitation to exploration in his intellectual pursuits that aligns with his career stages.
Contribution
Introduces a novel quantitative framework combining topic modeling and information theory to study individual scientific reading behavior and its evolution over time.
Findings
Darwin's reading behavior shifts from exploitation to exploration over his career.
His reading choices are more exploratory than the broader scientific culture.
Methods link individual cognitive search to collective scientific development.
Abstract
Search in an environment with an uncertain distribution of resources involves a trade-off between exploitation of past discoveries and further exploration. This extends to information foraging, where a knowledge-seeker shifts between reading in depth and studying new domains. To study this decision-making process, we examine the reading choices made by one of the most celebrated scientists of the modern era: Charles Darwin. From the full-text of books listed in his chronologically-organized reading journals, we generate topic models to quantify his local (text-to-text) and global (text-to-past) reading decisions using Kullback-Liebler Divergence, a cognitively-validated, information-theoretic measure of relative surprise. Rather than a pattern of surprise-minimization, corresponding to a pure exploitation strategy, Darwin's behavior shifts from early exploitation to later exploration,…
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