English

Bibliometrics/Citation networks

Digital Libraries 2015-02-24 v1

Abstract

In addition to shaping social networks, for example, in terms of co-authorship relations, scientific communications induce and reproduce cognitive structures. Scientific literature is intellectually organized in terms of disciplines and specialties; these structures are reproduced and networked reflexively by making references to the authors, concepts and texts embedded in these literatures. The concept of a cognitive structure was introduced in social network analysis (SNA) in 1987 by David Krackhardt, but the focus in SNA has hitherto been on cognition as a psychological attribute of human agency. In bibliometrics, and in science and technology studies (STS) more generally, socio-cognitive structures refer to intellectual organization at the supra-individual level. This intellectual organization emerges and is reproduced by the collectives of authors who are organized not only in terms of inter-personal relations, but also more abstractly in terms of codes of communication that are field-specific. Citations can serve as indicators of this codification process.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1502.06378,
  title  = {Bibliometrics/Citation networks},
  author = {Loet Leydesdorff},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1502.06378},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

preprint version of: George A. Barnett (Ed.), The Encyclopedia of Social Networks, Sage, 2011, pp. 72-74

R2 v1 2026-06-22T08:35:18.594Z