The emergence and evolution of the research fronts in HIV/AIDS research
David Fajardo-Ortiz, Malaquias Lopez-Cervantes, Luis Duran, Michel, Dumontier, Miguel Lara, Hector Ochoa, and Victor M Castano

TL;DR
This study maps the development of HIV/AIDS research by identifying key research fronts and analyzing their evolution over time through citation network analysis and text mining.
Contribution
It introduces a methodology combining network clustering and text mining to identify and analyze the dynamics of research fronts in HIV/AIDS literature.
Findings
Thirteen distinct research fronts identified.
Research fronts emerged in successive waves over time.
Evolution influenced by technological advances and epidemiological changes.
Abstract
In this paper, we have identified and analyzed the emergence, structure and dynamics of the paradigmatic research fronts that established the fundamentals of the biomedical knowledge on HIV/AIDS. A search of papers with the identifiers "HIV/AIDS", "Human Immunodeficiency Virus", "HIV-1" and "Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome" in the Web of Science (Thomson Reuters), was carried out. A citation network of those papers was constructed. Then, a sub-network of the papers with the highest number of inter-citations (with a minimal in-degree of 28) was selected to perform a combination of network clustering and text mining to identify the paradigmatic research fronts and analyze their dynamics. Thirteen research fronts were identified in this sub-network. The biggest and oldest front is related to the clinical knowledge on the disease in the patient. Nine of the fronts are related to the…
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