Bold ideas and critical thoughts on science.

Martin Schmidt, Benedikt Fecher, Christian Kobsda

Authorship in business and economy

Bibliometrics of the 20 highest performing authors in Business, Management, and Accounting as well as Economics, Econometrics, and Finance.
17 July 2017

Description

The number of authors per article in the subject area Business, Management, and Accounting is 2.6 on average with a maximum of 8 authors. The mean number of coauthors is increasing by 0.1 per year in the respective time period (Figure 1). The articles in this analysis (n = 999) were cited 10.5 times on average with a maximum of 138 citations.

The number of authors per article in the subject area Economics, Econometrics, and Finance is 2.8 on average with a maximum of 9 authors (Figure 2). The mean number of coauthors is increasing by 0.1 per year in the respective time period. The articles in this analysis (n = 1077) were cited 8.4 times on average and 188 as maximum.

Figure 1: Boxplot of the number of authors per paper in the subject area Business, Management, and Accounting. The box denotes 25–75% of the values with the median (bold line) in it. The small circles are outliers. Due to a limitation of the y-axis, some outliers are not shown. The yellow line shows a linear model of the mean number of authors per article with a confidence interval of 0.95 shown in light grey. Data source: Scopus. CC BY 4.0 Schmidt, Fecher, Kobsda.

Figure 2: Boxplot of the number of authors per paper in the subject area Economics, Econometrics, and Finance. The box denotes 25–75% of the values with the median (bold line) in it. The small circles are outliers. Due to a limitation of the y-axis, some outliersare not shown. The yellow line shows a linear model of the mean number of authors per article with a confidence interval of 0.95 shown in light grey. Data source: Scopus. CC BY 4.0 Schmidt, Fecher, Kobsda.

Methodology

The results of the Advanced search in Scopus were restricted by an algorithm with

  • a time period of publishing (2010 to 2016)
  • the document types (articles or reviews),
  • and a quantitative limitation regarding the publication output (articles by the 20 highest performing authors with the most Scopus listed articles in every subject area).

For details and code see Schmidt et al. 2017.

Author info

Martin Schmidt is a doctoral researcher at the Institute of Landscape Systems Analysis within Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research and associate researcher at Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society.

Benedikt Fecher is the programme director of the research programme Knowledge Dimension and heads the Open Science research group at the Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society.

Christian Kobsda works as the political consultant at the Leibniz Association and is an associate researcher at the Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.827270

Cite as

Schmidt, M., Fecher, B., Kobsda, C. (2017). Bibliometrics of the 20 highest performing authors in Business, Management, and Accounting as well as Economics, Econometrics, and Finance. Elephant in the lab. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.827270

References

Collapse references

Schmidt, M., Fecher, B., Kobsda, C. (2017). Methodology for the analysis of authors using meta data from Scopus. Elephant in the Lab. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.805718

0 Comments

Continue reading

Power and Publications in Chinese Academia

Power and Publications in Chinese Academia

Ruixue Jia on the influence of administrative power in Chinese academia on researchers’ publication activity, their selection of co-authors, and the topics they are writing about.