Author/Authors :
Howard D. White، نويسنده , , Barry Wellman، نويسنده , , Nancy Nazer، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Many authors have posited a social component in citation,
the consensus being that the citers and citees often
have interpersonal as well as intellectual ties. Evidence
for this belief has been rather meager, however, in part
because social networks researchers have lacked bibliometric
data (e.g., pairwise citation counts from online
databases), and citation analysts have lacked sociometric
data (e.g., pairwise measures of acquaintanceship).
In 1997 Nazer extensively measured personal relationships
and communication behaviors in what we call
“Globenet,” an international group of 16 researchers
from seven disciplines that was established in 1993 to
study human development. Since Globenet’s membership
is known, it was possible during 2002 to obtain
citation records for all members in databases of the
Institute for Scientific Information. This permitted examination
of how members cited each other (intercited) in
journal articles over the past three decades and in a 1999
book to which they all contributed. It was also possible
to explore links between the intercitation data and the
social and communication data. Using network-analytic
techniques, we look at the growth of intercitation over
time, the extent to which it follows disciplinary or interdisciplinary
lines, whether it covaries with degrees of
acquaintanceship, whether it reflects Globenet’s organizational
structure, whether it is associated with particular
in-group communication patterns, and whether it is
related to the cocitation of Globenet members. Results
show cocitation to be a powerful predictor of intercitation
in the journal articles, while being an editor or coauthor
is an important predictor in the book. Intellectual
ties based on shared content did better as predictors
than content-neutral social ties like friendship. However,
interciters in Globenet communicated more than did
noninterciters.