Quantifying simultaneous innovations in evolutionary medicine

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To what extent do simultaneous innovations occur and are independently from each other? In this paper we use a novel persistent keyword framework to systematically identify innovations in a large corpus containing academic papers in evolutionary medicine between 2007 and 2011. We examine whether innovative papers occurring simultaneously are independent from each other by evaluating the citation and co-authorship information gathered from the corpus metadata. We find that 19 out of 22 simultaneous innovative papers do, in fact, occur independently from each other. In particular, co-authors of simultaneous innovative papers are no more geographically concentrated than the co-authors of similar non-innovative papers in the field. Our result suggests producing innovative work draws from a collective knowledge pool, rather than from knowledge circulating in distinct localized collaboration networks. Therefore, new ideas can appear at multiple locations and with geographically dispersed co-authorship networks. Our findings support the perspective that simultaneous innovations are the outcome of collective behavior.

Original languageEnglish
JournalTheory in Biosciences
Volume139
Issue number4
Pages (from-to)319-335
Number of pages17
ISSN1431-7613
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12.2020

Bibliographical note

H. Youn was supported by the Ministry of Education of the Republic of Korea and the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF-2018S1A3A2075175).

    Research areas

  • Evolutionary medicine, Independence, Keyword extraction, Novelty, Simultaneous innovation
  • Transdisciplinary studies

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