The Memory of Science: Inflation, Myopia, and the Knowledge Network
Raj K. Pan, Alexander M. Petersen, Fabio Pammolli, Santo Fortunato

TL;DR
This study analyzes a massive citation network over nearly five decades, revealing how exponential growth and socio-technical factors influence scientific attention, citation patterns, and the evaluation of scientific impact.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive network-based model of scientific attention redirection and demonstrates how growth affects citation age distribution and impact assessment methods.
Findings
Attention to classic and recent literature is decreasing.
Growth rate perturbations influence citation network functionality.
Systemic overhaul needed for citation impact evaluation methods.
Abstract
Science is a growing system, exhibiting ~4% annual growth in publications and ~1.8% annual growth in the number of references per publication. Combined these trends correspond to a 12-year doubling period in the total supply of references, thereby challenging traditional methods of evaluating scientific production, from researchers to institutions. Against this background, we analyzed a citation network comprised of 837 million references produced by 32.6 million publications over the period 1965-2012, allowing for a temporal analysis of the `attention economy' in science. Unlike previous studies, we analyzed the entire probability distribution of reference ages - the time difference between a citing and cited paper - thereby capturing previously overlooked trends. Over this half-century period we observe a narrowing range of attention - both classic and recent literature are being…
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