Knowledge inheritance in disciplines: Quantifying the successive and distant reuse of references

Author:

Zhou Hongyu1ORCID,Dong Ke23ORCID,Xia Yikun23

Affiliation:

1. Centre for R&D Monitoring (ECOOM), Faculty of Social Sciences University of Antwerp Antwerp Belgium

2. Research Institute for Data Management & Innovation Nanjing University Suzhou China

3. School of Information Management Nanjing University Nanjing China

Abstract

AbstractHow the knowledge base of disciplines grows, renews, and decays informs their distinct characteristics and epistemology. Here we track the evolution of knowledge bases of 19 disciplines for over 45 years. We introduce the notation of knowledge inheritance as the overlap in the set of references between years. We discuss two modes of knowledge inheritance of disciplines—successive and distant. To quantify the status and propensity of knowledge inheritance for disciplines, we propose two indicators: one descriptively describes knowledge base evolution, and one estimates the propensity of knowledge inheritance. When observing the continuity in knowledge bases for disciplines, we show distinct patterns for STEM and SS&H disciplines: the former inherits knowledge bases more successively, yet the latter inherits significantly from distant knowledge bases. We further discover stagnation or revival in knowledge base evolution where older knowledge base ceases to decay after 10 years (e.g., Physics and Mathematics) and are increasingly reused (e.g., Philosophy). Regarding the propensity of inheriting prior knowledge bases, we observe unanimous rises in both successive and distant knowledge inheritance. We show that knowledge inheritance could reveal disciplinary characteristics regarding the trajectory of knowledge base evolution and interesting insights into the metabolism and maturity of scholarly communication.

Funder

National Office for Philosophy and Social Sciences

Vlaamse regering

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Library and Information Sciences,Information Systems and Management,Computer Networks and Communications,Information Systems

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