The Matthew effect has that recognition is bestowed on researchers of already high repute. If recognition is measured by citations, this means that often-cited papers or authors are cited more often. I use the statistical theory of the growth of firms to test whether the fame of papers and authors indeed exhibits increasing returns to scale, and confirm this hypothesis for the 100 most prolific economists
In a market context, a status effect occurs when actors are accorded differential recognition for th...
Reputation is an important social construct in science, which enables informed quality assessments o...
The existence of a “Matthew Effect” (a feedback loop where (dis)advantage tends to beget further (di...
The Matthew effect has that recognition is bestowed on researchers of already high repute. If recogn...
The Matthew effect has that often-cited papers/authors are cited more often. I use the statistical t...
This paper applies the Ijiri-Simon test for systematic deviations from Gibrat's law to citation numb...
Since the publication of Robert K. Merton’s theory of cumulative advantage in science (Matthew Effe...
Since the publication of Robert K. Merton’s theory of cumulative advantage in science (Matthew Effec...
One problem confronting the use of citation-based metrics in science studies and research evaluation...
A partial view of the Matthew effect in science asserts that the (already) most recognized scientist...
The Matthew effect refers to the adage written some two-thousand years ago in the Gospel of St. Matt...
In a market context, a status effect occurs when actors are accorded differential recognition for th...
Papers published in finance and economics journals whose first authors are famous have more citation...
Sociologists of science noticed that the results of many collaborative projects and discoveries are ...
The observation that a socioeconomic agent with a high reputation gets a disproportionately higher r...
In a market context, a status effect occurs when actors are accorded differential recognition for th...
Reputation is an important social construct in science, which enables informed quality assessments o...
The existence of a “Matthew Effect” (a feedback loop where (dis)advantage tends to beget further (di...
The Matthew effect has that recognition is bestowed on researchers of already high repute. If recogn...
The Matthew effect has that often-cited papers/authors are cited more often. I use the statistical t...
This paper applies the Ijiri-Simon test for systematic deviations from Gibrat's law to citation numb...
Since the publication of Robert K. Merton’s theory of cumulative advantage in science (Matthew Effe...
Since the publication of Robert K. Merton’s theory of cumulative advantage in science (Matthew Effec...
One problem confronting the use of citation-based metrics in science studies and research evaluation...
A partial view of the Matthew effect in science asserts that the (already) most recognized scientist...
The Matthew effect refers to the adage written some two-thousand years ago in the Gospel of St. Matt...
In a market context, a status effect occurs when actors are accorded differential recognition for th...
Papers published in finance and economics journals whose first authors are famous have more citation...
Sociologists of science noticed that the results of many collaborative projects and discoveries are ...
The observation that a socioeconomic agent with a high reputation gets a disproportionately higher r...
In a market context, a status effect occurs when actors are accorded differential recognition for th...
Reputation is an important social construct in science, which enables informed quality assessments o...
The existence of a “Matthew Effect” (a feedback loop where (dis)advantage tends to beget further (di...