Abstract A key aspect of generating new ideas is drawing from different elements of preexisting knowledge and combining them into a new idea. In such a process, the diversity of ideas plays a central role. This paper examines the empirical question of how the internet affected the diversity of new research by making the existing literature accessible online. The internet marks a technological shock which affects how academic scientists search for and browse through published documents. Using article-level data from economics journals for the period 1991 to 2009, we document how online accessibility lead academic economists to draw from a more diverse set of literature, and to write articles which incorporated more diverse contents
Abstract: The mean price of scholarly journals is now three times higher than it was in the mid-1980...
This paper reviews the impact of two convergent trends in publication; the growth of 'electronic dis...
This short article discusses an emerging trend in the information-seeking behaviour of scientists, i...
By increasing the ability to discover, access, and use academic journal articles, the Internet has b...
We investigate whether articles in economics that are freely available on the web have a cita-tion a...
This paper examines the shift to online knowledge in research. In recent years there has been a majo...
This paper updates Goffe and Parks (1997), which examined the Internet infrastructure of the economi...
This essay examines how researchers gain access to knowledge at a time when scholarly communication ...
The papers in this issue of First Monday were originally presented as a series of panels at the Asso...
Recent research on search costs in electronic markets documents that the wide use of Internet has re...
This essay presents a framework for understanding formal and informal scholarly communications that ...
Abstract: This paper advances two propositions, one concerning content, the other concerning researc...
This report concerns a pilot study of patterns of access to scientific documents made available on t...
A recent article by James Evans in Science (Evans 2008) is being widely discussed in the science and...
A recent article by James Evans in Science (Evans 2008) is being widely discussed in the science and...
Abstract: The mean price of scholarly journals is now three times higher than it was in the mid-1980...
This paper reviews the impact of two convergent trends in publication; the growth of 'electronic dis...
This short article discusses an emerging trend in the information-seeking behaviour of scientists, i...
By increasing the ability to discover, access, and use academic journal articles, the Internet has b...
We investigate whether articles in economics that are freely available on the web have a cita-tion a...
This paper examines the shift to online knowledge in research. In recent years there has been a majo...
This paper updates Goffe and Parks (1997), which examined the Internet infrastructure of the economi...
This essay examines how researchers gain access to knowledge at a time when scholarly communication ...
The papers in this issue of First Monday were originally presented as a series of panels at the Asso...
Recent research on search costs in electronic markets documents that the wide use of Internet has re...
This essay presents a framework for understanding formal and informal scholarly communications that ...
Abstract: This paper advances two propositions, one concerning content, the other concerning researc...
This report concerns a pilot study of patterns of access to scientific documents made available on t...
A recent article by James Evans in Science (Evans 2008) is being widely discussed in the science and...
A recent article by James Evans in Science (Evans 2008) is being widely discussed in the science and...
Abstract: The mean price of scholarly journals is now three times higher than it was in the mid-1980...
This paper reviews the impact of two convergent trends in publication; the growth of 'electronic dis...
This short article discusses an emerging trend in the information-seeking behaviour of scientists, i...