Team assembly mechanisms and the knowledge produced in the Mexico's National Institute of Geriatrics: a network analysis and agent-based modelling approach
Carmen Garc\'ia-Pe\~na, Luis Miguel Guti\'errez-Robledo, Augusto, Cabrera-Becerril, David Fajardo-Ortiz

TL;DR
This study combines network analysis and agent-based modeling to explore team assembly practices and knowledge organization at Mexico's National Institute of Geriatrics, revealing distinct strategies among research types and potential for interdisciplinary collaboration.
Contribution
It introduces an integrated approach using text mining, network analysis, and agent-based modeling to understand and simulate research team dynamics and knowledge production in a specialized biomedical institution.
Findings
Weak connection between basic and clinical research.
Different team assembly strategies for basic and clinical researchers.
Agent-based model accurately reproduces current team and knowledge structure.
Abstract
Mexico's National Institute of Geriatrics (INGER) is the national research center of reference for matters related to human aging. INGER scientists perform basic, clinical and demographic research which may imply different scientific cultures working together in the same specialized institution. In this paper, by a combination of text mining, co-authorship network analysis and agent-based modeling we analyzed and modeled the team assembly practices and the structure of the knowledge produced by scientists from INGER. Our results showed a weak connection between basic and clinical research, and the emergence of a highly connected academic leadership. Importantly, basic and clinical-demographic researchers exhibited different team assembly strategies: Basic researchers tended to form larger teams mainly with external collaborators while clinical and demographic researchers formed smaller…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
