| Literature DB >> 29081554 |
Lili Wang1, Xianwen Wang2, Niels J Philipsen3,4.
Abstract
Collaborations between China and the European Union (EU) member states involve not only connections between China and individual countries, but also interactions between the different EU member states, the latter of which is due also to the influence exerted by the EU's integration strategy. The complex linkages between China and the EU28, as well as among the 28 EU member states, are of great importance for studying knowledge flows. Using co-authorship analysis, this study explores the changes of the network structure between 2000 and 2014. Our results show that EU member states with middle- or low- scientific capacities, in particular those who joined the EU after 2000, have been actively reshaping the network of scientific collaborations with China. The linkages between middle- and low- scientific capacity countries have been tremendously strengthened in the later years. The network positional advantage (measured by the degree of betweenness centrality) has shifted from a few dominant nations to a wider range of countries. We also find that countries like Belgium, Sweden and Denmark are in important positions connecting the relatively low-capacity 'new' EU member states with China. The 'new' EU member states-that have relatively low scientific capacity-intend to cooperate with China jointly with 'old' EU member(s).Entities:
Keywords: Centrality; EU member states; Integration; International collaboration; Network; Science; Structure
Year: 2017 PMID: 29081554 PMCID: PMC5640754 DOI: 10.1007/s11192-017-2488-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scientometrics ISSN: 0138-9130 Impact factor: 3.238
Fig. 1Changes of collaboration intensity. Note (1) Collaboration intensity is the average of the collaboration strength index calculated by Eq. (1). (2) Four quartiles are divided based on the number of publications
Fig. 2Shift of network centrality in the China-EU28 collaboration network. Note The values plotted are normalized betweenness centrality (see Eq. 3).
Source Authors’ own elaboration
Fig. 3The structure of China-EU28 collaboration network (2000–2004). Note (1) The size of the circle represents the volume of joint publications with China between 2000 and 2004. (2) The thickness of the lines represents the connection strength between countries. (3) Network filter is used in order to have a clear map. (4) Different node colours indicate different clusters. (5) Thirteen new EU members are in light blue squares.
Source Authors’ own elaboration. (Color figure online)
Fig. 4The structure of China-EU28 collaboration network (2010–2014). Note (1) The size of the circle represents the volume of joint publications with China between 2010 and 2014. (2) The thickness of the lines represents the connection strength between countries. (3) Network filter is used in order to have a clear map. (4) Different node colours indicate different clusters. (5) Thirteen new EU members are in light blue squares.
Source Authors’ own elaboration. (Color figure online)