DocumentCode
2398475
Title
Kevin Bacon, degrees-of-separation, and MIS research
Author
Beckman, Paul ; Forsman, Åsa
Author_Institution
San Francisco State Univ., CA, USA
fYear
2002
fDate
7-10 Jan. 2002
Abstract
The standard method for measuring the "value" of a researcher is to sum the total number of articles they have published in peer-reviewed journals. The research described proposes the use of "degrees-of-separation" (DOS) as another dimension that considers collaboration along which we might assess the value of a researcher: The average DOS value for one node in a graph is the average of the number of steps in each of its shortest paths to each other node. The graph node with the smallest average DOS value is the node that is, on average, "most closely connected" to the rest of the nodes. When applied to academic research, an author can be considered a node, connected to other nodes through co-authored articles. The experiment described in the article uses DOS to rank and compare with earlier rankings, those MIS researchers previously judged to be highly productive.
Keywords
graph theory; information services; management information systems; research and development management; MIS research; MIS researchers; academic research; average DOS value; co-authored articles; degrees-of-separation; graph node; peer-reviewed journals; researcher value measurement; shortest paths; smallest average DOS value; Collaboration; Collaborative tools; Collaborative work; Graph theory; H infinity control; Mathematics; Measurement standards; Peer to peer computing; Productivity; Standards publication;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
System Sciences, 2002. HICSS. Proceedings of the 35th Annual Hawaii International Conference on
Print_ISBN
0-7695-1435-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/HICSS.2002.994389
Filename
994389
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