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Relational hyperevent models for the coevolution of coauthoring and citation networks (2308.01722v3)

Published 3 Aug 2023 in cs.DL and stat.AP

Abstract: The development of suitable statistical models for the analysis of bibliographic networks has trailed behind the empirical ambitions expressed by recent studies of science of science. Extant research typically restricts the analytical focus to either paper citation networks, or author collaboration networks. These networks involve not only direct relationships between papers or authors, but also a broader system of dependencies between the references of papers connected through multiple simultaneous citation links. In this work, we extend recently developed relational hyperevent models (RHEM) to analyze scientific networks - systems of scientific publications connected by citations and authorship. We introduce new covariates that represent theoretically relevant and empirically meaningful sub-network configurations. The new model specification supports testing of hypotheses that align with the polyadic nature of scientific publication events and the multiple interdependencies between authors and references of current and prior papers. We implement the model using open-source software to analyze a large, publicly available scientific network dataset. A significant finding of the study is the tendency for subsets of papers to be repeatedly cited together across publications. This result is crucial as it suggests that the papers' impact may be partly due to endogenous network processes. More broadly, the study shows that models accounting for both the hyperedge structure of publication events and the interconnections between authors and references significantly enhance our understanding of the network mechanisms that drive scientific production, productivity, and impact.

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