Open Access

Predictive Characteristics of Co-authorship Networks: Comparing the Unweighted, Weighted, and Bipartite Cases

   | Sep 01, 2017

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Purpose

This study aims to answer the question to what extent different types of networks can be used to predict future co-authorship among authors.

Design/methodology/approach

We compare three types of networks: unweighted networks, in which a link represents a past collaboration; weighted networks, in which links are weighted by the number of joint publications; and bipartite author-publication networks. The analysis investigates their relation to positive stability, as well as their potential in predicting links in future versions of the co-authorship network. Several hypotheses are tested.

Findings

Among other results, we find that weighted networks do not automatically lead to better predictions. Bipartite networks, however, outperform unweighted networks in almost all cases.

Research limitations

Only two relatively small case studies are considered.

Practical implications

The study suggests that future link prediction studies on co-occurrence networks should consider using the bipartite network as a training network.

Originality/value

This is the first systematic comparison of unweighted, weighted, and bipartite training networks in link prediction.

eISSN:
2543-683X
Language:
English
Publication timeframe:
4 times per year
Journal Subjects:
Computer Sciences, Information Technology, Project Management, Databases and Data Mining