In many academic fields, the number of papers published each year has increased significantly over time. Policy measures aim to increase the quantity of scientists, research funding, and scientific output, which is measured by the number of papers produced. These quantitative metrics determine the career trajectories of scholars and evaluations of academic departments, institutions, and nations. Whether and how these increases in the numbers of scientists and papers translate into advances in knowledge is unclear, however. Here, we first lay out a theoretical argument for why too many papers published each year in a field can lead to stagnation rather than advance. The deluge of new papers may deprive reviewers and readers the cognitive sla...
Scientists often perceive a trade-off between quantity and quality in scientific publishing: finite ...
Over the last few decades, the institutionalisation of quantitative research evaluations has create...
Since the 1950s, citation number or “impact” has been the dominant metric by which science is quanti...
For decades the number of scientific publications has been rapidly increasing, effectively out-datin...
Scientific production is steadily growing, exhibiting 4% annual growth in publications and 1.8% annu...
In all of science, the authors of publications depend on the knowledge presented by the previous pub...
<div><p>Debates over the pros and cons of a “publish or perish” philosophy have inflamed academia fo...
Theories of scientific and technological change view discovery and invention as endogenous processes...
Science is a growing system, exhibiting ~4% annual growth in publications and ~1.8% annual growth in...
Mathematical models of the scientific citation process predict a strong “first-mover” effect under ...
Over the last few decades, the institutionalisation of quantitative research evaluations has created...
Nobel Prizes are commonly seen to be among the most prestigious achievements of our times. Based on ...
A Kuhnian approach to research assessment requires us to consider that the important scientific brea...
<div><p>Over the last few decades, the institutionalisation of quantitative research evaluations has...
Nobel Prizes are commonly seen to be among the most prestigious achievements of our times. Based on ...
Scientists often perceive a trade-off between quantity and quality in scientific publishing: finite ...
Over the last few decades, the institutionalisation of quantitative research evaluations has create...
Since the 1950s, citation number or “impact” has been the dominant metric by which science is quanti...
For decades the number of scientific publications has been rapidly increasing, effectively out-datin...
Scientific production is steadily growing, exhibiting 4% annual growth in publications and 1.8% annu...
In all of science, the authors of publications depend on the knowledge presented by the previous pub...
<div><p>Debates over the pros and cons of a “publish or perish” philosophy have inflamed academia fo...
Theories of scientific and technological change view discovery and invention as endogenous processes...
Science is a growing system, exhibiting ~4% annual growth in publications and ~1.8% annual growth in...
Mathematical models of the scientific citation process predict a strong “first-mover” effect under ...
Over the last few decades, the institutionalisation of quantitative research evaluations has created...
Nobel Prizes are commonly seen to be among the most prestigious achievements of our times. Based on ...
A Kuhnian approach to research assessment requires us to consider that the important scientific brea...
<div><p>Over the last few decades, the institutionalisation of quantitative research evaluations has...
Nobel Prizes are commonly seen to be among the most prestigious achievements of our times. Based on ...
Scientists often perceive a trade-off between quantity and quality in scientific publishing: finite ...
Over the last few decades, the institutionalisation of quantitative research evaluations has create...
Since the 1950s, citation number or “impact” has been the dominant metric by which science is quanti...