This article engages with problems that are usually opaque: What trajectories do scientific debates assume, when does a scientific community consider a proposition to be a fact, and how can we know that? We develop a strategy for evaluating the state of scientific contestation on issues. The analysis builds from Latour’s black box imagery, which we observe in scientific citation networks. We show that as consensus forms, the importance of internal divisions to the overall network structure declines. We consider substantive cases that are now considered facts, such as the carcinogenicity of smoking and the non-carcinogenicity of coffee. We then employ the same analysis to currently contested cases: the suspected carcinogenicity of cellular p...
International audienceHow are social and epistemic structures of a research community driving future...
We rely on science and other organized forms of inquiry to answer cardinal questions on issues varyi...
The Scientific Method is the series of processes by which hypotheses, ideas and theories are shown t...
The Temporal Structure of Scientific Consensus Formation (Shwed and Bearman 2010) developed a proced...
In this chapter, we shed new light on the epistemic struggle between establishing consensus and ackn...
How do scientists adopt new ideas? This question was high on the agenda of science studies in the 19...
Different types of organizations, e.g. National Institute of Health (NIH), Intergovernmental Panel o...
In this paper, we explore changes in both structural and semantic characteristics of a scientific so...
Why do members of the public disagree - sharply and persistently - about facts on which expert scien...
We start by showing how science is as much a personal as a social endeavour, carefully driven betwe...
The origin of population-scale coordination has puzzled philosophers and scientists for centuries. R...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020I argue that there is no single, monolithic conception...
peer reviewedScience is a self-correcting process. While a consensus implies a majority, what is con...
The goal of science has always been to investigate the world and its phenomena, by collecting data f...
This paper reviews current debates in social epistemology about the relations between knowledge a...
International audienceHow are social and epistemic structures of a research community driving future...
We rely on science and other organized forms of inquiry to answer cardinal questions on issues varyi...
The Scientific Method is the series of processes by which hypotheses, ideas and theories are shown t...
The Temporal Structure of Scientific Consensus Formation (Shwed and Bearman 2010) developed a proced...
In this chapter, we shed new light on the epistemic struggle between establishing consensus and ackn...
How do scientists adopt new ideas? This question was high on the agenda of science studies in the 19...
Different types of organizations, e.g. National Institute of Health (NIH), Intergovernmental Panel o...
In this paper, we explore changes in both structural and semantic characteristics of a scientific so...
Why do members of the public disagree - sharply and persistently - about facts on which expert scien...
We start by showing how science is as much a personal as a social endeavour, carefully driven betwe...
The origin of population-scale coordination has puzzled philosophers and scientists for centuries. R...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020I argue that there is no single, monolithic conception...
peer reviewedScience is a self-correcting process. While a consensus implies a majority, what is con...
The goal of science has always been to investigate the world and its phenomena, by collecting data f...
This paper reviews current debates in social epistemology about the relations between knowledge a...
International audienceHow are social and epistemic structures of a research community driving future...
We rely on science and other organized forms of inquiry to answer cardinal questions on issues varyi...
The Scientific Method is the series of processes by which hypotheses, ideas and theories are shown t...