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Submitted on July 28, 2006
Accepted on January 29, 2007
Affiliation of the authors: 1 Department of Biomedical Informatics, School of Medicine, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN ; 2 Institute for Software Research International, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA
* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Objective The goal of this research is to learn how the editorial staffs of bioinformatics and medical informatics journals provide support for cross-community exposure. Models such as co-citation and co-author analysis measure the relationships between researchers; but they do not capture how environments that support knowledge transfer across communities are organized.
Methods We propose a social network analysis model to study how editorial boards integrate researchers from disparate communities. We evaluate our model by building relational networks based on the editorial boards of approximately 40 journals that serve as research outlets in medical informatics and bioinformatics. We track the evolution of editorial relationships through a longitudinal investigation over the years 2000 through 2005.
Results Our findings suggest that there are research journals that support the collocation of editors from the bioinformatics and medical informatics communities. Network centrality metrics indicate that editors are located in the intersection of the communities and that the number of individuals in the intersection is growing with time.
Conclusions Social network analysis methods provide insight into the relationships between the medical informatics and bioinformatics communities. The number of the editors facilitating the publication intersection of the communities has grown, but the intersection remains dependent on a small group of individuals and fragile.
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