INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION OF THREE EAST EUROPEAN COUNTRIES WITH GERMANY IN THE SCIENCES,

Similar documents
... Methods. Aileen Clarke 1, Mary Gatineau 2, Olivier Grimaud 3, Sandrine Royer-Devaux 3, Nia Wyn-Roberts 4, Isabelle Le Bis 3, Grant Lewison 5

European Union Passport

The Extraordinary Extent of Cultural Consumption in Iceland

Relationship between Economic Development and Intellectual Production

Eurostat Yearbook 2006/07 A goldmine of statistical information

Fertility rate and employment rate: how do they interact to each other?

Widening of Inequality in Japan: Its Implications

Dr. Eugene Garfield President, Institute for Scientific Information 3501 Market St. Philadelphia, PA USA

CO3.6: Percentage of immigrant children and their educational outcomes

This refers to the discretionary clause where a Member State decides to examine an application even if such examination is not its responsibility.

Performance and Structures of the German Science System 2012

On aid orphans and darlings (Aid Effectiveness in aid allocation by respective donor type)

Context Indicator 17: Population density

Asylum Trends. Appendix: Eurostat data

OECD Health Data 2009 comparing health statistics across OECD countries

Asylum Trends. Appendix: Eurostat data

Asylum Trends. Appendix: Eurostat data

Asylum Trends. Appendix: Eurostat data

Asylum Trends. Appendix: Eurostat data

UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL 9 APRIL 2018, 15:00 HOURS PARIS TIME

Asylum Trends. Appendix: Eurostat data

Asylum Trends. Appendix: Eurostat data

The evolution of turnout in European elections from 1979 to 2009

Aid spending by Development Assistance Committee donors in 2015

Parental Working in Europe: Non-standard working hours

LABOUR-MARKET INTEGRATION OF IMMIGRANTS IN OECD-COUNTRIES: WHAT EXPLANATIONS FIT THE DATA?

Euro area unemployment rate at 9.9% EU27 at 9.4%

Data Protection in the European Union. Data controllers perceptions. Analytical Report

September 2012 Euro area unemployment rate at 11.6% EU27 at 10.6%

OECD ECONOMIC SURVEY OF LITHUANIA 2018 Promoting inclusive growth

UK Productivity Gap: Skills, management and innovation

Size and Development of the Shadow Economy of 31 European and 5 other OECD Countries from 2003 to 2013: A Further Decline

EUROPEAN UNION CITIZENSHIP

ARTICLES. European Union: Innovation Activity and Competitiveness. Realities and Perspectives

The High Cost of Low Educational Performance. Eric A. Hanushek Ludger Woessmann

How Does Aid Support Women s Economic Empowerment?

Andrew Wyckoff, OECD ITIF Innovation Forum Washington, DC 21 July 2010

3Z 3 STATISTICS IN FOCUS eurostat Population and social conditions 1995 D 3

Special Eurobarometer 469. Report

LABOUR PRODUCTIVITY AS A FACTOR OF SECTOR COMPETITIVENESS

Mapping Researcher Mobility. Measuring research collaboration among APEC economies

South Africa - A publisher s perspective. STM/PASA conference 11 June, 2012, Cape Town Mayur Amin, SVP Research & Academic Relations

DG for Justice and Home Affairs. Final Report

How have the Eastern European countries of the former Warsaw Pact developed since 1990? A bibliometric study

HIGHLIGHTS. There is a clear trend in the OECD area towards. which is reflected in the economic and innovative performance of certain OECD countries.

The Transmission of Economic Status and Inequality: U.S. Mexico in Comparative Perspective

EUROBAROMETER 62 PUBLIC OPINION IN THE EUROPEAN UNION

Labor Market Laws and Intra-European Migration

Dirk Pilat:

PISA 2009 in Hong Kong Result Release Figures and tables accompanying press release article

PARTIE II RAPPORT RÉGIONAL. établie par le Professeur Nigel Lowe, Faculté de droit de l Université de Cardiff * * *

WORLDWIDE DISTRIBUTION OF PRIVATE FINANCIAL ASSETS

Varieties of Capitalism and Welfare States Policy and Performance

Proposal for a COUNCIL DECISION

The Wage Effects of Immigration and Emigration

Europe in Figures - Eurostat Yearbook 2008 The diversity of the EU through statistics

Challenges for Baltics as for the Eurozone countries having Advanced Economy status

SPANISH NATIONAL YOUTH GUARANTEE IMPLEMENTATION PLAN ANNEX. CONTEXT

The Party of European Socialists: Stability without success

Country and Regional Scientific. Production Profiles. Research and Innovation

INTEGRATION OF IMMIGRANTS INTO THE LABOUR MARKET IN EU AND OECD COUNTRIES

The European Emergency Number 112

Minimum Wages under the Conditions of the Global Economic Crisis

Corporate Ownership and Control

Extended Findings. Finland. ecfr.eu/eucoalitionexplorer. Question 1: Most Contacted

The Markets for Website Authentication Certificates & Qualified Certificates

Flash Eurobarometer 364 ELECTORAL RIGHTS REPORT

Integration of data from different sources: Unemployment

OECD Strategic Education Governance A perspective for Scotland. Claire Shewbridge 25 October 2017 Edinburgh

UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL 10 APRIL 2019, 15:00 HOURS PARIS TIME. Development aid drops in 2018, especially to neediest countries

Upgrading workers skills and competencies: policy strategies

PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS OF SCIENCE, RESEARCH AND INNOVATION

GDP - AN INDICATOR OF PROSPERITY OR A MISLEADING ONE? CRIVEANU MARIA MAGDALENA, PHD STUDENT, UNIVERSITATEA DIN CRAIOVA, ROMANIA

Table A.1. Jointly Democratic, Contiguous Dyads (for entire time period noted) Time Period State A State B Border First Joint Which Comes First?

Study. Importance of the German Economy for Europe. A vbw study, prepared by Prognos AG Last update: February 2018

DANMARKS NATIONALBANK

SKILLS, MOBILITY, AND GROWTH

PARTIE III RAPPORTS NATIONAUX. établie par le Professeur Nigel Lowe, Faculté de droit de l Université de Cardiff * * *

Letter prices in Europe. Up-to-date international letter price survey. March th edition

Equity and Excellence in Education from International Perspectives

Britain s Population Exceptionalism within the European Union

14328/16 MP/SC/mvk 1 DG D 2B

Note on the Security Component of the 2004 CDI. Michael O Hanlon Adriana Lins de Albuquerque The Brookings Institution April 2004

Emerging Asian economies lead Global Pay Gap rankings

Wages in utilities in 2010

Monitoring poverty in Europe: an assessment of progress since the early-1990s

Estimating the foreign-born population on a current basis. Georges Lemaitre and Cécile Thoreau

Taiwan s Development Strategy for the Next Phase. Dr. San, Gee Vice Chairman Taiwan External Trade Development Council Taiwan

3.1. Importance of rural areas

Bulletin. Networking Skills Shortages in EMEA. Networking Labour Market Dynamics. May Analyst: Andrew Milroy

Objective Indicator 27: Farmers with other gainful activity

The European emergency number 112

UNITARY PATENT PROTECTION (UPP) PACKAGE

Special Eurobarometer 461. Report. Designing Europe s future:

Are we moving towards an integrated European Research Area? Some macro-level bibliometric perspectives

The new demographic and social challenges in Spain: the aging process and the immigration

Employment and Unemployment in the EU. Structural Dynamics and Trends 1 Authors: Ph.D. Marioara Iordan 2

The Israeli Economy: Current Trends, Strength and Challenges

How does education affect the economy?

EU Innovation strategy

Transcription:

Scientometrics, Vol. 25. No. 2 (1992) 219-227 World Flash on Basic Research INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION OF THREE EAST EUROPEAN COUNTRIES WITH GERMANY IN THE SCIENCES, 1980-1989 W. GLANZEL,* + M. WINTERHAGER*,** *University Bielefeld, Center for Science Studies, P.O.B. 8640, W-4800 Bielefeld i (Germany) ** Social Sciences Information Centre, Lenn~strafle 30, W-5300 Bonn I (Germany) (Received January 14, 1992) Introduction In a recent study on international collaboration in the sciences, Schubert and Braun 1 have presented figures and indicators in order to characterize significance and strength of international research cooperation 1981-1985. Collaboration was measured through the number of co-authorship links. As a main result, Schubert and Braun presented a world map of international cooperative links in the sciences for the 36 most productive countries in the world. The links have been considered to be significant if Salton's measure rik, i.e., the ratio of the number of two countries' cooperations and the geometric mean of their total publication outputs, is greater than 1%. In principle, the existence of four major co-author clusters of the map confirms some well-known facts, particularly, the intensive cooperation in the Western world represented by one huge cluster and two smaller ones (Nordic countries and Australia and New Zealand, respectively) and a separate smaller cluster for Eastern Europe. Somewhat surprising was, however, the significant link between Poland and Germany (cf. Schubert and Braun1). This was in brief the situation in the first half of the decade. + On leave from: Information Science and Scientometrics Research Unit (ISSRU), Library of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, P.O.B. 7, H-1361 Budapest, Hungary. Scientornetrics 25 (1992) Elsevier, Amsterdam - Oxford- New York - Tokyo Akad~miai Kiad6

W. GLANZEL, M. WINTERHAGER: WORLD FLASH ON BASIC RESEARCH Now, as a consequence of the political, economic and cultural changes in Eastern Europe, and especially with regard to the great effort of Hungary, Poland and Czechoslovakia towards a soon integration into the European Community an increasing interest on the research performance and the cooperative links of these countries has arisen. In the following we attempt to analyse the collaboration of these three countries with the EC countries, especially with Germany in the decade 1980-1989. Data sources All data used for the analysis have been taken from the SCI and SSCI databases of the Institute for Scientific Information (ISI, Philadelphia, PA, USA). Data have been retrieved based on the on-line version SCISEARCH (via DIMDI), whereas particular information concerning the publication profde and the authors' aff'diation have been taken from the CD-ROM version of the SCI Citations have been calculated from the magnetic tapes of the annual cumulations Citation Index Files of the SCI and in part based on SCISEARCH (via DIMDI). Only citable items (e.g., research articles, letters, notes, reviews) were taken into consideration. The papers have been assigned to countries based on the corporate address given by the authors. Co-authorship of Hungarian, Czechoslovakian and Polish authors with European authors has been recorded if the concerning countries occured simultaneously. The annual number of publications have been retrieved for 1980-1989, citations were counted for the first three years, starting from the publication year. The choice of this citation window makes sure that the citation impact of all selected papers could be calculated. The size of all science paper sets was great enough to conduct reliable statistical analyses. On the other hand, the set of social science papers was not sufficiently large for any scientometric analysis. Only 34 co-authorships of the three countries with Germany were found for the whole decade. The following study is therefore restricted to five global fields of the sciences, particularly to the life sciences, physical sciences, chemistry, engineering and mathematics. Results Although the United Kingdom is with more than 30% of all papers published by EC countries in the sciences the greatest European scientific community (see Table 220 Scientometrics 25 (1992)

W. GLANZEL, M. WINTERHAGER: WORLD FLASH ON BASIC RESEARCH 1), co-operation with the analysed countries, especially with Hungary and Poland, is unambiguously dominated by German scientists. Table 1 presents the basic bibliometric data on the co-authorship links of Hungary, Poland and Czechoslovakia with the member states of the European Community. Some m0re interesting results can be obtained if the relative strength of co-authorship links is considered for the f'trst and the second half of the decade, separately. In Table 2 Salton's measure has been used. Its exact definition is rik = nik/(nink)l/2, where nik is the number of co-authored papers with addresses of two analysed countries and n i and n k is their total publication output. The strength of coauthorship links of Hungary, Poland and Czechoslovakia with almost all EC countries increases in the second half of the 1980s. The closest links can be found between Germany and these countries. Only in case of Czechoslovakia cooperation remains below the threshold value of 1%. The cooperation between Polish and French authors during 1986 and 1989 is, however, remarkable. Table 1 Distribution of the contribution to EC research output by member countries based on corporate addresses of publications (column 1) and distribution of East European co-authorship links with EC member countries (column 2-4) Country EC HUN POL CZE UK 30.6 17.0 15.8 17.7 Germany 22.7 35.0 33.2 26.8 France 19.0 15.2 21.9 19.5 Italy 8.9 15.2 12.0 12.5 Netherlands 6.3 7.3 7.5 9.1 Spain 4.2 2.0 1.6 2.1 Belgium 3.4 5.1 3.9 6.8 Denmark 2.9 2.3 2.4 3.7 Greece 1.0 0.7 1.0 1.1 Ireland 0.7 0.2 0_5 0.6 Portugal 0.3 0.3 0.1 0.1 Luxembourg 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Scientometrics 25 (1992) 221

W. GLANZEL, M. WINTERHAGER: WORLD FLASH ON BASIC RESEARCH Table 2 Relative strength (rik) of co-authorship links of Eastern Middle-European countries with the European Community, 1980-1984 and 1985-1989 Country rik(hun ) rik(pol ) rik(cze) 80-84 85-89 80-84 85-89 80-84 85-89 UK 0.30 0,40 02;0 0.61 0.19 0.29 Germany 0.56 1.10 0.97 1.70 0.22 0.41 France 0.31 0.48 0.84 1.10 0.26 0.33 Italy 0.38 0.68 0.59 0.95 0.24 0.31 Netherlands 0.30 0.37 0.47 0.68 0.21 0.27 Spain 0.02 0.18 0.10 0.19 0.03 0.09 Belgium 0.31 0.33 0.30 0.53 0.20 0.29 Denmark 0.21 0.11 0.20 0.33 0.09 0.20 Greece 0.03 0.12 0.02 0.34 0.04 0.10 Ireland 0.00 0.04 0.07 0.13 0.04 0.05 Portugal 0.02 0.08 0.03 0.05 0.00 0.03 Luxembourg 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 In addition to the above data and indicators Figs 1 and 2 show the change of the three countries' publication output and the share of papers co-authored with German scientists between 1980 and 1989. Figure 1 shows a stable publication output of all three countries with very small increments. The only exception is a drastic decrease of Polish publication output in 1982 which is, however, completely compensated in the subsequent years. Data concerning the absolute publication outputs can be found in Table 3. The rapid increase of cooperations of Hungary and Poland with Germany as well as the moderate cooperation of Czechoslovakia during the whole observation period confirm the corresponding indicator values in Table 2. The following part is concerned with the research profile of the studied cooperations with Germany. In order to avoid artefacts it is of particular interest whether cooperation with Germany means a bilateral cooperation or a multilateral one with German participation. Particularly, if the majority of German cooperations would turn out to be only a part of great multinational projects, then the validity of possible conclusions may not always be guaranteed. Figure 3 shows the share of bilateral vs. multilateral co-authorships with Germany. The share of purely bilateral cooperations in all cooperations with German participation ranges between 60% and 90%. Only the case of Hungary is showing a slight decrease over time. 222 Scientometrics 25 (1992)

W. GI.ANZEL, M. WINTERHAGER: WORLD FLASH ON BASIC RESEARCH i.i00 0 0 ~~~~ a 0 v [,,. o 0 v I ~ ~ ~ ~ $cientometrics 25 (1992) 223

W. GLANZEL, M. WINTERHAGER: WORLD FLASH ON BASIC RESEARCH 9 s------- ~4 ~ CZE _,., Pubtication y Fig. 1, Publication output of Hungarian, Polish and Czechoslovakian authors, 1980-1989 5 POL Publication year Fig. 2. Percentage share of cooperations with Germany in all fields of the sciences, 1980-1989 If the research profde of Hungarian, Polish and Czechoslovakian cooperations with Germany between 1980 and 1989 is compared with the usual national research profiles of these East European countries (of. Schubert et al.z), a remarkable shift from chemistry and engineering to physical sciences can be noticed. This tendency holds for all three countries but especially for Poland where almost 50% of all papers with German co-authors are concerned with physical sciences. Figure 4 presents the distribution of papers with German co-authors by five major fields. The deviation of these research profdes from the usual national ones becomes clearer if purely bilateral vs. multilateral projects with German participation are considered 224 Sr 25 (1992)

w. GLANZEL, M. WINTERHAGER: WORLD FLASH ON BASIC RESEARCH separately. The data are given in Table 4. The great portion of physics research in multinational projects is of course not surprising. Its overwhelming share in multilateral publications of German and Polish co-authors (more then 70%) is, however, noticable. The contrary tendency in Czechoslovakian cooperations is rather unexpected. The portion of physics papers shrinks in multinational research as compared with purely bilateral projects wheras the number of publications in the life sciences is growing. More then 50% of all multilateral papers with German coauthors come from the life sciences. Finally an interesting detail: 34 out of 60 multinational papers published by Hungarian and German authors in 1986 and 1987 were concerned with Comet Halley. 100- % 80 60,, P0L 82 84 86 Publication year Fig. 3. Share of Hungarian-German, Polish-German and Czechoslovakian-German bilateral papers in all Hungarian, Polish and Czechosiovakian cooperations with German participation, 1980-1989 Table 4 Distribution of purely bilateral (b) and multilateral (m) cooperations with Germany, 1980-1989 Major field Hungary Poland Czechoslovakia b m b m b m Life sciences 46.9 48.8 35.7 15.9 40.3 52.7 Physical sciences 21.8 28.8 36.5 70.7 31.8 27.1 Chemistry 22.0 16.1 14.9 8.0 18.7 13.2 Engineering 5.3 2.4 10.7 4.0 4.9 4.7 Mathematics 4.0 3.9 2.3 1.4 4.2 2.3 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Scientometrics 25 (1992) 225

W. GI.~tNZEL, M. WINTERHAGER: WORLD FLASH ON BASIC RESEARCH 4.6'/,, HUNGARY 3.9~ 20.5"1, ~. 47.4"1o POLAND 2.0'1, 12.60/0~29.2"/, CZECHOSLOVAKIA 4.9,,/, 3-6"1" 17.0"1~ 44.2"/, 30.3"/~ 47.7*/,"x-x-x"~ [] Life sciences 9 Mathernatics [] Engineering [] Chemistry I~ Physical sciences Fig. 4. Distribution of Hungarian-German, Polish-German and Czechoslovakian-German papers by majors fields, 1980-1989 A short discussion of the citation rates of the papers co-authored with German scientists have received will conclude this study. A citation period of three years (publication year and the two subsequent years) seems on the macro-level and in consideration of the abpve research profdes long enough to guarantee valid results (cf. Gltinzel and Schoepflin3). The annual mean citation rates range between 3 and 5. This corresponds to a much higher standard than that of the East European countries. In the second half of the decade Hungarian-German papers had the highest citation impact, followed by Polish-German cooperations. The Czechoslovakian publications have the least impact of the group. Because of the great yearly fluctuation a statistical reliability test is omitted. The huge impact of Polish cooperations in 1981 and 1982 is, however, striking, especially if this phenomenon is compared to the above mentioned "publication valley" in 1982 (see Fig. 1 and Table 3). The very low portion of uncited papers in all three cooperation groups is remarkable. The relative frequency of those papers which have not received any citations during the first three years is relatively stable and ranges between 13% 226 Scientometrics 25 (1992)

W. GLANZEL, M. WlNTERHAGER: WORLD FLASH ON BASIC RESEARCH and 33%. The great impact as well as the small portion of uncited papers seems to comfh'm the greater effort of bi- and multinational research. This study is in part supported by an Alexander von Humboldt Research Fellowship. The first author wishes to ackowlegde the support. References 1. A. SCHUBERT, T. BRAUN, International collaboration in the sciences, 1981-1985, Scientometrics 19 (1990) 3-10. 2. A. SCHUBERT, W. GLA~ZEL, T. BRAUN, Scientometrie datafiles. A comprehensive set of indicators on 2649 journals and 96 countries in all major science fields and subfields, 1981-1985, Scientometrics 16 (1989) 3-478. 3. W. GL~ZEL, U. SCHOEPFLEq, A bibliometric study on aging and reception processes of scientific literature, submitted to Journal of Information Sciences. Scientometrics 25 (1992) 227