Literature DB >> 31327888

The emergence of team science: Understanding the state of adoption research through social network analysis.

Catherine A Hamilton1, Raffaele Vacca2, Jeanne-Marie R Stacciarini1.   

Abstract

The notion of team science has recently gained popularity in European and American health sciences considering increasing evidence that scientific collaboration produces higher-impact research and that complex scientific problems are better investigated by interdisciplinary teams. While publication metrics indicate adoption research is expanding, the comprehensive structure of adoption studies as a scientific field has not been formally evaluated for collaborative and cross-disciplinary activity. This article aims to elucidate the structure, composition, and dynamics of scientific relationships within adoption research that may inform research and practice strategies, competencies, and cohesion within the field. Using social network analysis, we extracted bibliographic data on 2767 peer-reviewed adoption-related articles from 1930s to 2014 and evaluated the resulting co-authorship and co-citation networks. We found that adoption research has grown substantially over the last 25 years, and is conducted in varied disciplines, with increasing collaboration across geography and disciplinary areas. The co-authorship and co-citation networks are approaching numeric thresholds and structural configurations distinctive of well-established and more institutionalized fields of study. These findings reveal the maturation of adoption studies as a team science and argue for the development of institutional mechanisms that support such evolution. Implications for professional and research planning are discussed.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Adoption; adoption research; co-authorship; co-citation; interdisciplinary teams; organization; research planning; social network analysis; team science

Year:  2017        PMID: 31327888      PMCID: PMC6641573          DOI: 10.1177/0308575917714714

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adopt Foster        ISSN: 0308-5759


  3 in total

1.  Great minds think alike, or do they often differ? Research topic overlap and the formation of scientific teams.

Authors:  Thomas Bryan Smith; Raffaele Vacca; Till Krenz; Christopher McCarty
Journal:  J Informetr       Date:  2020-12-05       Impact factor: 5.107

2.  Fostering interdisciplinary collaboration: A longitudinal social network analysis of the NIH mHealth Training Institutes.

Authors:  Eric Ho; Minjeong Jeon; Minho Lee; Jinwen Luo; Angela F Pfammatter; Vivek Shetty; Bonnie Spring
Journal:  J Clin Transl Sci       Date:  2021-09-20

3.  Global Research Trends on the Treatment of Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma: A Bibliometric and Visualized Study.

Authors:  Qintong Duan; Yufeng Li; Lijia Ou; Yajun Li; Ruolan Zeng; Yizi He; Tao Pan; Siwei Chen; Huan Chen; Hui Zang; Hui Zhou; Ling Xiao
Journal:  J Cancer       Date:  2022-03-14       Impact factor: 4.207

  3 in total

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