Back to Search Start Over

Pandemics are catalysts of scientific novelty: Evidence from COVID‐19.

Authors :
Liu, Meijun
Bu, Yi
Chen, Chongyan
Xu, Jian
Li, Daifeng
Leng, Yan
Freeman, Richard B.
Meyer, Eric T.
Yoon, Wonjin
Sung, Mujeen
Jeong, Minbyul
Lee, Jinhyuk
Kang, Jaewoo
Min, Chao
Song, Min
Zhai, Yujia
Ding, Ying
Source :
Journal of the Association for Information Science & Technology. Aug2022, Vol. 73 Issue 8, p1065-1078. 14p. 3 Graphs.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Scientific novelty drives the efforts to invent new vaccines and solutions during the pandemic. First‐time collaboration and international collaboration are two pivotal channels to expand teams' search activities for a broader scope of resources required to address the global challenge, which might facilitate the generation of novel ideas. Our analysis of 98,981 coronavirus papers suggests that scientific novelty measured by the BioBERT model that is pretrained on 29 million PubMed articles, and first‐time collaboration increased after the outbreak of COVID‐19, and international collaboration witnessed a sudden decrease. During COVID‐19, papers with more first‐time collaboration were found to be more novel and international collaboration did not hamper novelty as it had done in the normal periods. The findings suggest the necessity of reaching out for distant resources and the importance of maintaining a collaborative scientific community beyond nationalism during a pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23301635
Volume :
73
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of the Association for Information Science & Technology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
157778224
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/asi.24612