Dynamics of global institutional collaboration in insect taxonomy reveal imbalance of taxonomic effort

Institutional collaboration promotes development and technical advances in science. A social network analysis is often used to assess the evolutionary dynamics of institutional collaboration in many fields. However, there has been no social network analysis of the insect taxonomy field based on bibl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Insect conservation and diversity 2019-01, Vol.12 (1), p.18-28
Hauptverfasser: Deng, Jun, Wang, Xu, Zeng, Lingda, Zou, Xuting, Huang, Xiaolei, Leather, Simon, Broad, Gavin
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container_end_page 28
container_issue 1
container_start_page 18
container_title Insect conservation and diversity
container_volume 12
creator Deng, Jun
Wang, Xu
Zeng, Lingda
Zou, Xuting
Huang, Xiaolei
Leather, Simon
Broad, Gavin
description Institutional collaboration promotes development and technical advances in science. A social network analysis is often used to assess the evolutionary dynamics of institutional collaboration in many fields. However, there has been no social network analysis of the insect taxonomy field based on bibliometric data. To explore the evolutionary pattern of institutional collaboration in this field, a total of 21 095 articles were collected from the Web of Science between 1997 and 2016. According to author affiliations data, we found increasingly closer collaboration has occurred in this network over time. Due to economic development, social attention, and policies supporting science and research, developing countries such as China and Brazil have shown a strong upward tendency towards collaboration since 2001. However, the development of institutional collaboration reveals imbalance of taxonomic effort and requires careful attention to certain aspects. Several countries have published numerous research articles, whereas most countries have published a small number of papers. Most institutions have tended to collaborate with institutions from same country, neighbouring countries or continent. Some institutions in developing countries (e.g. China) have numerous collaborators, however these institutions only played a modest role in introducing new collaboration between their collaborators. More work needs be done to improve intermediary ability and to reduce the influence of geographical distance. This study offered a vision for understanding the evolutionary dynamics of institutional collaboration in the insect taxonomy field, and it also suggested further enhancement of institutional collaboration in some weak aspects.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/icad.12298
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subjects Bibliometrics
Cluster analysis
Collaboration
Developing countries
Evolution
insect taxonomy
institutional collaboration
LDCs
Social network analysis
Social networks
Social organization
taxonomic effort
Taxonomy
title Dynamics of global institutional collaboration in insect taxonomy reveal imbalance of taxonomic effort
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