Mapping the dynamics of research networks in ecology and evolution using co-citation analysis (1975–2015)
Reale et al., 2019.
https://ecoevorxiv.org/dpef4/
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Reale et al., 2019.
In this paper we used a co-citation network analysis to quantify and
illustrate the dynamic patterns of research in ecology and evolution
over 40 years (1975–2014). We addressed questions about the historical
patterns of development of these two fields. Have ecology and evolution
always formed a coherent body of literature? What ideas have motivated
research activity in subfields, and how long have these ideas attracted
the attention of the scientific community? Contrary to what we expected,
we did not observe any trend towards a stronger integration of ecology
and evolution into one big cluster that would suggest the existence of a
single community. Three main bodies of literature have stayed
relatively stable over time: population/community ecology, evolutionary
ecology, and population/quantitative genetics. Other fields disappeared,
emerged or mutated over time. Besides, research organization has
shifted from a taxon-oriented structure to a concept-oriented one over
the years, with researchers
working on the same topics but on different taxa showing more
interactions.
https://ecoevorxiv.org/dpef4/
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