| Literature DB >> 32027718 |
Stefan Partelow1, Anna-Katharina Hornidge1,2, Paula Senff1,2, Moritz Stäbler1, Achim Schlüter1,3.
Abstract
Scientific agenda setting is critical at all levels of research, but can be strongly influenced by structural path dependencies of the science system itself. In this article we examine how knowledge production is shaped by interconnected path dependencies using the field of tropical marine sciences as a global case study. We use scientometric analysis methods on an original data set of 1328 peer-reviewed journal publications to examine publication trends including a co-authorship network analysis, links between author origin and research locations as well as a quantitative analysis of terminology use over space (i.e., region) and time. Scientometric findings are analytically discussed through a conceptual framework premised on theories of path dependency. Findings and critical analysis highlight how tropical marine science provides a prominent global example of how North American, European and Australian science programs predominantly shape knowledge production of the global science system, generating critical reflection on the path dependencies these create on current and likely future knowledge production and science agendas. Similar dependencies face other fields of science, and thus this study provides broadly relevant quantitative observational empirical findings supplemented with a critical social science analysis of how a transcultural Science and Technology Studies lens is useful for unpacking the webs of path dependencies driving, inhibiting and/ or shaping global knowledge production, placing meaning and context over observed empirical trends.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32027718 PMCID: PMC7004553 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0228613
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Different types of path dependencies presented as a conceptual framework.
| Type of path dependency | Definition/ explanation |
|---|---|
| (1) Material science infrastructures | Equipment, labs, and access to research vessels and marine research stations are essential for data collection and analysis. Their quality/standard in a particular science system forms a crucial path dependency that plays out in scientific activity in the present. |
| (2) Immaterial science infrastructures | Here we distinguish access to funding and donor landscapes, language of research and teaching, existing partnership networks and the disciplinary versus theme-oriented (or other) organization of a particular science system. These four are detailed out in the following. |
| (2a) Access to funding and donor landscape | Where money comes from, what it is supposed to be used for and how much is available shapes dependencies. If the European Union for instance, allocates its research budget to climate change adaptation in Europe, it may be difficult to get EU funding for gender-related research in West Africa. Existing funding lines can be closely tied to historical developments and politics. The global differences in terms of public Research and Development expenditures (as % of GDP) are published on a yearly basis by the UNESCO Institute for Statistics [ |
| (2b) Language of research and teaching | Publishing and speaking languages create strong path dependencies. English is the dominant international publishing language, determining how science is communicated and who is advantaged in doing so. The general language spoken in a country can create both challenges and opportunities for research and collaboration from and within that country. |
| (2c) Science networks—Transregional, national and international | Science collaboration, friendship, grown professional or cultural networks can create dependencies. Educational networks (e.g., place of degree attained) create networks over various generations. Language and funding networks (e.g., mandated consortiums) can be initiators of network development. |
| (2d) Disciplinary, thematic and type of research-related organization of the science system | Organizing scientific knowledge production by disciplines, thematic foci, or problem orientation has long-term consequences for the type of research done. Degrees of applied vs. basic research, theoretical embedding, philosophies of science and separation or reciprocal co-shaping of theological and scientific outlooks on reality vary and determine the possibilities for the type of future research done within a particular science system. |
Review categories and definitions used in this analysis.
| Category | Definition |
|---|---|
| Author origin | Country of author stated on publication affiliation. If multiple in different countries, the first was taken. |
| Research location | Regional location of empirical focus of the research taken from the abstract or full text if needed. If necessary, multiple locations per article were used. |
| Number of authors per article | The number of authors in the authorship list of the publication. |
| Publication title and abstract | The title and abstract text of each publication was used for qualitative data analysis. |
| Year | Year publication was published. |
| Domestic collaboration | Two authors on the same publication from the same countries in their affiliation. |
| International collaboration | Two authors on the same publication from different countries. |
| Single author | Only one author on the publication. |
| Publication disciplinary focus | Based on classification of social, ecological or social-ecological processes focused on in each publication, based on Partelow et al., (2018) review categories. |
Fig 6This figure has three parts.
Top: Trajectories of the six terminology clusters identified from abstracts’ indicator words (1–6 Table 5 above) through space and time, as displayed through heat-maps of deviations from the occurrences of the cluster that would be expected if indicator words were uniformly distributed across clusters and regions in each year. Positive anomalies show increasing shades of brown, and negative anomalies turquoise (White = as expected if abstracts’ indicator words were even across clusters, space and time; Brown = more important; Turquoise = Less important; Black = No publication for that year and region). Mid: Time series of the contributions of each terminology to the total number of indicator words produced that year; increasing line widths represent the growing number of total publications (and hence: indicator words) through time. Bottom: Percentage contribution of each World Bank region to each terminology, averaged over time. White areas are countries with no first author publication.
Fig 1(A) The number of publications in tropical marine science over time. Each year is subdivided into the type of publication, either single author or multi-author. Multi-author publications are referred to as collaboration publications, if all authors are from the same country they are classified as domestic and if there are authors from different countries they are classified as international. (B) Proportion of single author and collaboration publications by the region of the first author. Total N is shown to the right.
Total number of first author and total authors per country.
Only countries with more than 1%, all other countries are below 1% in both percentage lead author and all authors. Full table in S1 Table.
| Country | Percentage lead author | Total N lead author | Percentage all authors | Total N all authors |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | 20.26 | 269 | 20.03 | 1210 |
| USA | 18.07 | 240 | 17.48 | 1056 |
| Brazil | 8.21 | 109 | 8.16 | 493 |
| UK | 4.89 | 65 | 4.55 | 275 |
| India | 3.99 | 53 | 3.18 | 192 |
| Mexico | 3.99 | 53 | 3.69 | 223 |
| France | 3.09 | 41 | 3.66 | 221 |
| Philippines | 2.71 | 36 | 2.80 | 169 |
| Germany | 2.64 | 35 | 2.65 | 160 |
| Canada | 2.48 | 33 | 1.94 | 117 |
| China | 2.18 | 29 | 2.33 | 141 |
| Malaysia | 1.81 | 24 | 1.79 | 108 |
| Kenya | 1.20 | 16 | 1.22 | 74 |
| Costa Rica | 1.13 | 15 | 1.09 | 66 |
| Indonesia | 1.13 | 15 | 1.69 | 102 |
| Singapore | 1.13 | 15 | 1.41 | 85 |
| Sweden | 1.13 | 15 | 1.11 | 67 |
Fig 2Comparison of co-authorship trends at the country level.
(A) Ratio of the number of domestic vs international co-authors per country. (B) Total number of co-authors per country. (C) Number of countries collaborated with (at least once).
Fig 3Spatial projection of an undirected network analysis of international authorship collaboration between countries.
Red circular nodes indicate the number of international collaborations of individual countries. Node size is dependent on the total number of collaborations (i.e., all incoming and outgoing edge lines). The thickness of edge lines between countries represents the number of publications with authors from both countries. Node and edges sizes are scaled differently to enable better visualization.
Node centrality metrics for each network analysis.
Only the top 10 countries (nodes) are shown for undirected authorship network analysis. All twelve regions are shown in the directed author-to-region network. Full lists for undirected authorship network analysis can be found in S5 and S6 Tables.
| Undirected international authorship network | Directed author-to-region network | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| USA | 172 | USA | 5286 | USA | 1.000 | Southeast Asia | 28 |
| Australia | 136 | Australia | 3416 | Australia | 0.913 | Southwest Asia | 28 |
| UK | 126 | UK | 2232 | UK | 0.631 | East Africa | 28 |
| France | 112 | France | 1506 | France | 0.320 | Pacific Islands | 26 |
| Canada | 90 | Germany | 1050 | Canada | 0.306 | Caribbean | 23 |
| Germany | 78 | Canada | 860 | Philippines | 0.288 | South America | 18 |
| South Africa | 66 | Philippines | 844 | Germany | 0.277 | Central America | 16 |
| Netherlands | 62 | Mexico | 782 | Namibia | 0.241 | East Asia | 11 |
| Indonesia | 58 | Malaysia | 736 | Malaysia | 0.234 | Australia and NZ | 11 |
| Japan | 58 | Indonesia | 678 | Mexico | 0.225 | Middle Africa | 8 |
Fig 4Directed network of the author country location with edge arrows going to the tropical region of research.
Black circular nodes indicate research regions and the in-degree (i.e., the number of edges coming into the region).
Publication citation data by region.
| First author region | % missing citation data in sample | Avg. citations per pub. per year | Avg. citations per pub. | # pubs. with citation data | # and % pubs. with ≥50 citations | # and % pubs. with ≥100 citations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia and NZ | 17.9 | 5.829 | 39.71 | 239 | 36 (15%) | 11 (4.5%) |
| Caribbean | 45.8 | 2.774 | 13.46 | 14 | 0 | 0 |
| Central America | 41.7 | 2.556 | 15.91 | 49 | 5 (10%) | 1 (2%) |
| East Africa | 28.0 | 2.335 | 9.88 | 36 | 1 (27%) | 0 |
| East Asia | 20.0 | 2.878 | 20.36 | 44 | 3 (6.8%) | 1 (2.2%) |
| Europe | 21.3 | 3.663 | 25.75 | 166 | 22 (13%) | 8 (4.8%) |
| North America | 19.9 | 4.006 | 29.53 | 229 | 28 (12%) | 10 (4.3%) |
| Pacific Islands | 30.4 | 3.884 | 23.12 | 16 | 2 (12.5%) | 1 (6%) |
| South America | 28.2 | 2.863 | 13.64 | 102 | 5 (5%) | 0 |
| Southeast Asia | 28.1 | 2.756 | 21.41 | 87 | 11 (12.6%) | 6 (6.8%) |
| Southwest Asia | 29.0 | 2.908 | 10.04 | 71 | 1 (1.5%) | 0 |
| West Africa | 20.0 | 2.383 | 5.75 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
Fig 5Open access publications versus closed access by region of the first author.
Clustering of 248 indicator words into six terminology groups, based on their co-occurrence in 1328 abstracts.
| Terminology clusters | Indicator words |
|---|---|
| Cluster 1 | Fish, change, fishery, climate, understand, plan, process, research, information, scale, catch, future, global, state, knowledge, national, park, consider, examine, well, effort, government, action, focus, target, part, require, project, diverse, context, few |
| Cluster 2 | Species, marine, use, management, community, high, ecosystem, habitat, water, island, tropical, sea, site, mangrove, increase, resource, conservation, ecological, impact, datum, local, provide, coast, system, may, sediment, level, population, effect, include, seagrass, model, development, large, low, suggest, zone, present, environment, activity, indicate, find, little, potential, there, approach, identify, some, good, human, need, biodiversity, natural, base, monitor, assess, significant, quality, protection, case, reduce, cause, affect, measure, occur, anthropogenic, threat, caribbean, importance, land, loss, when, strong, likely, recent, degradation, despite, function, adjacent, represent, available, decade, lead, throughout |
| Cluster 3 | result, region, show, two, along, great, pattern, analysis, distribution, spatial, pacific, influence, year, current, factor, time, range, temperature, barrier, lagoon, south, role, variation, dynamic, size, difference, period, event, limit, variability, australia, world, small, individual, response, after, several, 2017, eastern, long-term, central, complex, surface, evidence |
| Cluster 4 | ocean, diversity, abundance, value, structure, sample, cover, total, assemblage, survey, biomass, benthic, method, density, bay, map, composition, record, estimate, group, location, compare, relationship, depth, richness, indian, type, western, although, tool, variable, evaluate, index, biological, investigate, set, relative, reveal, control, demonstrate, 2018, term, overall |
| Cluster 5 | condition, 5, economic, new, decline, support, strategy, major, under, social, tourism, mean, country, numb, paper, food, far, key, improve, here, pressure, four, benefit, status, health, challenge, main, live, critical, sustainable, contribute, policy, issue, exist, remain, aim, often |
| Cluster 6 | Rate, nutrient, source, growth, concentration, determine, order, similar |