Significance Scientific papers typically have a finite lifetime: their rate to attract citations achieves its maximum a few years after publication, and then steadily declines. Previous studies pointed out the existence of a few blatant exceptions: papers whose relevance has not been recognized for decades, but then suddenly become highly influential and cited. The Einstein, Podolsky, and Rosen “paradox” paper is an exemplar Sleeping Beauty. We study how common Sleeping Beauties are in science. We introduce a quantity that captures both the recognition intensity and the duration of the “sleeping” period, and show that Sleeping Beauties are far from exceptional. The distribution of such quantity is continuous and has power-law behavior, suggesting a common mechanism behind delayed but intense recognition at all scales. A Sleeping Beauty (SB) in science refers to a paper whose importance is not recognized for several years after publication. Its citation history exhibits a long hibernation period followed by a sudden spike of popularity. Previous studies suggest a relative scarcity of SBs. The reliability of this conclusion is, however, heavily dependent on identification methods based on arbitrary threshold parameters for sleeping time and number of citations, applied to small or monodisciplinary bibliographic datasets. Here we present a systematic, large-scale, and multidisciplinary analysis of the SB phenomenon in science. We introduce a parameter-free measure that quantifies the extent to which a specific paper can be considered an SB. We apply our method to 22 million scientific papers published in all disciplines of natural and social sciences over a time span longer than a century. Our results reveal that the SB phenomenon is not exceptional. There is a continuous spectrum of delayed recognition where both the hibernation period and the awakening intensity are taken into account. Although many cases of SBs can be identified by looking at monodisciplinary bibliographic data, the SB phenomenon becomes much more apparent with the analysis of multidisciplinary datasets, where we can observe many examples of papers achieving delayed yet exceptional importance in disciplines different from those where they were originally published. Our analysis emphasizes a complex feature of citation dynamics that so far has received little attention, and also provides empirical evidence against the use of short-term citation metrics in the quantification of scientific impact.
Defining and identifying Sleeping Beauties in science
Qing Ke,Emilio Ferrara,F. Radicchi,A. Flammini
Published 2015 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2015
- Venue
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
- Publication date
2015-05-24
- Fields of study
Medicine, Physics, Computer Science, Philosophy
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
CITATION MAP
EXTRACTION MAP
CLAIMS
CONCEPTS
- delayed recognition
The pattern in which a paper receives little attention for a long period after publication before gaining notice later.
Aliases: late recognition, hibernation
- large-scale multidisciplinary analysis
The study design that examines 22 million papers spanning natural and social sciences over more than a century.
Aliases: multidisciplinary analysis, large-scale analysis
- parameter-free measure
A metric introduced to quantify the extent to which a paper exhibits sleeping-beauty behavior by combining timing and intensity of recognition.
Aliases: measure, SB measure
- power-law behavior
A scaling pattern in which the frequency of the measured quantity follows a power-law distribution.
Aliases: power law, power-law distribution
- short-term citation metrics
Impact measures based on citation counts observed over short post-publication windows.
Aliases: short-term metrics, citation metrics
- sleeping beauties
Scientific papers whose importance is not recognized for several years after publication and later experience a sudden citation surge.
Aliases: SBs, Sleeping Beauty
REFERENCES
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