Making visible the invisible through the analysis of acknowledgements in the humanities
Adrian A. Diaz-Faes, Maria Bordons

TL;DR
This paper explores how acknowledgements in humanities research reveal invisible social and intellectual contributions, offering a new perspective on scholarly communication beyond traditional authorship and citation metrics.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive framework for understanding acknowledgements as part of the reward system in humanities, emphasizing their role in reflecting intellectual indebtedness and social interactions.
Findings
Peer communication is the main support acknowledged in humanities.
Acknowledgements can serve as super-citations in humanities research.
Studying acknowledgements helps understand social and intellectual influences behind research.
Abstract
Purpose: Science is subject to a normative structure that includes how the contributions and interactions between scientists are rewarded. Authorship and citations have been the key elements within the reward system of science, whereas acknowledgements, despite being a well-established element in scholarly communication, have not received the same attention. This paper aims to put forward the bearing of acknowledgements in the humanities to bring to the foreground contributions and interactions that, otherwise, would remain invisible through traditional indicators of research performance. Design/methodology/approach: The study provides a comprehensive framework to understanding acknowledgements as part of the reward system with a special focus on its value in the humanities as a reflection of intellectual indebtedness. The distinctive features of research in the humanities are…
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