Author/Authors :
Pulgarin، Antonio نويسنده Department of Information and Communication, University of Extremadura, Badajoz ,
Abstract :
The main aim of this paper was to examine whether the characteristics of the Lotka distribution of
publications (in particular, the changes that the two parameters, n and c, undergo) constitute an
indicator of the structure of influence in a scientific field. A quasi-experimental method was used to
estimate the parameters of Lotkaʹs law in a number of scientific areas (by means of a series of
searches in the Scopus database). The study was performed on 90 sets of author productivity data
(resulting from a combination of 10 areas, 14 countries, and 3 time periods). Both the exponent of
the law, n (i.e., the slope of the log-log plot), and the constant c (the fraction of authors with only a
single publication) were found to depend on the state of development of the scientific area, on its
productivity, on the country, and on the time period being studied. A characteristic that
distinguished the so-called "hard sciences" from the "social sciences and humanities" was the level of
co-authorship, with the average number of authors per publication being greater in science than in
the social sciences and humanities. The empirical results show a picture of the behaviour of the
Lotka distribution in different situations, due to different causes. This could be interesting as a better
understanding of these regularities may allow them to be incorporated into the theoretical context.