Torvik coauthors paper in PNAS on academic kinship

Vetle Torvik
Vetle Torvik, Associate Professor

Family relationships play a role in the business world, but what about academia? An international team of researchers, including Assistant Professor Vetle Torvik, has discovered that family background, or kinship, can influence academic careers just as it does in other sectors of society.

The researchers examined coauthorship surname patterns in five decades of health science literature worldwide. Using the PubMed database, with over twenty-one million papers, they identified country-specific trends over time and found that coauthors who are part of a kin tend to hold central positions in their collaborative networks. Torvik's contribution to the research was to conduct the geocoding and disambiguation of author names; without these enabling technologies, the analysis of such large-scale data would not have been possible.

The resulting paper, "Kin of coauthorship in five decades of health science literature," will be published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS; vol. 113 no. 30). In addition to Torvik, researchers included lead author Mattia Prosperi (Department of Epidemiology, University of Florida, Gainesville), Iain Buchan (Centre of Health Informatics, University of Manchester, U.K.), Iuri Fanti (Infectious Diseases Clinic, Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Rome, Italy), Sandro Meloni (Institute for Biocomputation and Physics of Complex Systems and Department of Theoretical Physics, University of Zaragoza, Spain), and Pietro Palladino (Genomics, Genetics and Biology Innovation Pole, Italy).

In their conclusion, the researchers noted, "[A] certain level of kinship may have beneficial effects on the research outputs of a country, whereas greater or lesser amounts of kinship could have adverse effects....Just as kin build potent academic networks with their own resources, societies may do well to provide equivalent support for talented individuals with fewer resources, on the periphery of networks."

Torvik's current research addresses problems related to scientific discovery and collaboration using complex models and large-scale bibliographic databases. At the iSchool, he teaches courses on those topics as well as text and data mining, statistical modeling, informetrics, and information processing. He has built a suite of bibliographic data mining tools and datasets that are available from Abel.

Tags:
Updated on
Backto the news archive

Related News

Schneider selected as 2024-2025 Harvard Radcliffe Institute Fellow

Associate Professor Jodi Schneider has been selected as a 2024-2025 fellow of the Harvard Radcliffe Institute, an institute of Harvard University that fosters interdisciplinary research across the humanities, sciences, social sciences, arts, and professions.

Jodi Schneider

iSchool researchers to present at ACM Web Conference

Members of Associate Professor Dong Wang's research group, the Social Sensing and Intelligence Lab, will present their research at the Web Conference 2024, which will be held from May 13-17 in Singapore. The Web Conference is the premier venue to present and discuss progress in research, development, standards, and applications of topics related to the Web.

iSchool researchers to present at CHI 2024

iSchool faculty and students will present their research at the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI 2024), which will be held from May 11-16 in Honolulu, Hawaii. The conference, considered the most prestigious in the field of Human-Computer Interaction, attracts researchers and practitioners from around the globe. The theme for CHI 2024 is "Surfing the World."

CHI 2024

iSchool researchers present at inaugural ASIS&T symposium

iSchool researchers will present their work at the Association for Information Science & Technology (ASIS&T) Midwest Chapter Spring Symposium on April 26. The inaugural symposium will include talks by seventeen researchers from ten institutions across the Midwest region.

iSchool researchers present at iConference 2024

The following iSchool faculty and students participated in the virtual portion of iConference 2024 from April 15-18. The in-person portion of the conference will be held in Changchun, China, from April 22-26. The theme of this year’s conference is "Wisdom, Well-being, Win-win."