from ArXiv: Newman on First Mover Advantage

Pikas, Christina K. Christina.Pikas at JHUAPL.EDU
Thu Sep 4 19:27:36 EDT 2008



The first-mover advantage in scientific publication

Authors: M. E. J. Newman <http://arxiv.org/find/physics/1/au:+Newman_M/0/1/0/all/0/1> 
(Submitted on 2 Sep 2008)

	Abstract: Mathematical models of the scientific citation process predict a strong "first-mover" effect under which the first papers in a field will, essentially regardless of content, receive citations at a rate enormously higher than papers published later. Moreover papers are expected to retain this advantage in perpetuity -- they should receive more citations indefinitely, no matter how many other papers are published after them. We test this conjecture against data from a selection of fields and in several cases find a first-mover effect of a magnitude similar to that predicted by the theory. Were we wearing our cynical hat today, we might say that the scientist who wants to become famous is better off -- by a wide margin -- writing a modest paper in next year's hottest field than an outstanding paper in this year's. On the other hand, there are some papers, albeit only a small fraction, that buck the trend and attract significantly more citations than theory predicts despite having relatively late publication dates. We suggest that papers of this kind, though they often receive comparatively few citations overall, are probably worthy of our attention. 

Comments: 	7 pages, 3 figures	
Subjects: 	Physics and Society (physics.soc-ph)	
Cite as: 	arXiv:0809.0522v1 <http://arxiv.org/abs/0809.0522v1>  [physics.soc-ph]	
 
(http://arxiv.org/abs/0809.0522)
 
(if only I could reliably predict what will be hot next year, I might be able to write a modest paper on it!)
 
 
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mail.asis.org/pipermail/sigmetrics/attachments/20080904/7211a157/attachment.html>


More information about the SIGMETRICS mailing list