Why are some scientific disciplines, such as sociology and psychology, more fragmented into conflicting schools of thought than other fields, such as physics and biology? Furthermore, why does high fragmentation tend to coincide with limited scientific progress? We analyzed a formal model where scientists seek to identify the correct answer to a research question. Each scientist is influenced by three forces: (i) signals received from the correct answer to the question; (ii) peer influence; and (iii) noise. We observed the emergence of different macroscopic patterns of collective exploration, and studied how the three forces affect the degree to which disciplines fall apart into divergent fragments, or so-called “schools of thought”. We con...
There is a disabling avalanche of scientific production which has overtaken most students of the beh...
Scientific progress has many facets and can be conceptualized in different ways, for example in term...
There is a recurrent discourse about the fragmentation of psychology and its crises as a science, wh...
<div><p><i>Why are some scientific disciplines, such as sociology and psychology, more fragmented in...
We consider the long-term evolution of science and show how a ‘contagion of disrespect’ – an increas...
The birth and decline of disciplines are critical to science and society. However, no quantitative m...
Much less is known about the development of the social sciences as a complete discipline group than ...
Political science is generally thought of as a discipline with strong divisions and often intense pa...
How do scientists adopt new ideas? This question was high on the agenda of science studies in the 19...
The current research tested the validity of the traditional Compteian hierarchical model of science ...
Some years ago, Thomas Kuhn (1962)pointed out that science advances in one oftwo main ways. First, b...
In the controversy in 1989 over the reported achievement of cold nuclear fusion, parts of the physic...
This paper looks at the centrality of action in social disciplines and examines the implications of ...
Science benefits from substantial cognitive diversity because cognitive diversity promotes scientifi...
Social science is in jeopardy, both from attempts to make it like other sciences, and from the empha...
There is a disabling avalanche of scientific production which has overtaken most students of the beh...
Scientific progress has many facets and can be conceptualized in different ways, for example in term...
There is a recurrent discourse about the fragmentation of psychology and its crises as a science, wh...
<div><p><i>Why are some scientific disciplines, such as sociology and psychology, more fragmented in...
We consider the long-term evolution of science and show how a ‘contagion of disrespect’ – an increas...
The birth and decline of disciplines are critical to science and society. However, no quantitative m...
Much less is known about the development of the social sciences as a complete discipline group than ...
Political science is generally thought of as a discipline with strong divisions and often intense pa...
How do scientists adopt new ideas? This question was high on the agenda of science studies in the 19...
The current research tested the validity of the traditional Compteian hierarchical model of science ...
Some years ago, Thomas Kuhn (1962)pointed out that science advances in one oftwo main ways. First, b...
In the controversy in 1989 over the reported achievement of cold nuclear fusion, parts of the physic...
This paper looks at the centrality of action in social disciplines and examines the implications of ...
Science benefits from substantial cognitive diversity because cognitive diversity promotes scientifi...
Social science is in jeopardy, both from attempts to make it like other sciences, and from the empha...
There is a disabling avalanche of scientific production which has overtaken most students of the beh...
Scientific progress has many facets and can be conceptualized in different ways, for example in term...
There is a recurrent discourse about the fragmentation of psychology and its crises as a science, wh...