English

Citation network centrality: a scientific awards predictor?

Digital Libraries 2019-10-22 v2 Statistical Mechanics Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability Physics and Society

Abstract

The KK-index is an easily computable centrality index in complex networks, such as a scientific citations network. A researcher has a KK-index equal to KK if he or she is cited by KK articles that have at least KK citations. The KK-index has several advantages over Hirsh's hh-index and, in previous studies, has shown better correlation with Nobel prizes than any other index given by the {\em Web of Science}, including the hh-index. It is plausible that researchers who are the most connected to other scientifically well-connected researchers are the most likely to be doing important work and more likely to be awarded major prizes in a given area. However, the correlation found does not imply causation. Here we perform an experiment using the KK-index, producing a shortlist of twelve candidates for major scientific prizes, including the Physics Nobel award, in the near future. For example, our top-12 KK-index list naturally selects the 2019 Nobel laureate, James Peebles. The list can be updated annually and should be compared to laureates of the following years

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1910.02369,
  title  = {Citation network centrality: a scientific awards predictor?},
  author = {Osame Kinouchi and Adriano J. Holanda and George C. Cardoso},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1910.02369},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

5 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables

R2 v1 2026-06-23T11:35:29.944Z