Academic collaboration rates and citation associations vary substantially between countries and fields
Research collaboration is promoted by governments and research funders but if the relative prevalence and merits of collaboration vary internationally different national and disciplinary strategies may be needed to promote it. This study compares the team size and field normalised citation impact of...
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Zusammenfassung: | Research collaboration is promoted by governments and research funders but if
the relative prevalence and merits of collaboration vary internationally
different national and disciplinary strategies may be needed to promote it.
This study compares the team size and field normalised citation impact of
research across all 27 Scopus broad fields in the ten countries with the most
journal articles indexed in Scopus 2008-2012. The results show that team size
varies substantially by discipline and country, with Japan (4.2) having two
thirds more authors per article than the UK (2.5). Solo authorship is rare in
China (4%) but common in the UK (27%). Whilst increasing team size associates
with higher citation impact in almost all countries and fields, this
association is much weaker in China than elsewhere. There are also field
differences in the association between citation impact and collaboration. For
example, larger team sizes in the Business, Management & Accounting category do
not seem to associate with greater research impact, and for China and India,
solo authorship associates with higher citation impact. Overall, there are
substantial international and field differences in the extent to which
researchers collaborate and the extent to which collaboration associates with
higher citation impact. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1910.00789 |