{"title":"Publishing Instincts: An Exploration-Exploitation Framework for Studying Academic Publishing Behavior and \"Home Venues\"","authors":"Teddy Lazebnik, Shir Aviv-Reuven, Ariel Rosenfeld","doi":"arxiv-2409.12158","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Scholarly communication is vital to scientific advancement, enabling the\nexchange of ideas and knowledge. When selecting publication venues, scholars\nconsider various factors, such as journal relevance, reputation, outreach, and\neditorial standards and practices. However, some of these factors are\ninconspicuous or inconsistent across venues and individual publications. This\nstudy proposes that scholars' decision-making process can be conceptualized and\nexplored through the biologically inspired exploration-exploitation (EE)\nframework, which posits that scholars balance between familiar and\nunder-explored publication venues. Building on the EE framework, we introduce a\ngrounded definition for \"Home Venues\" (HVs) - an informal concept used to\ndescribe the set of venues where a scholar consistently publishes - and\ninvestigate their emergence and key characteristics. Our analysis reveals that\nthe publication patterns of roughly three-quarters of computer science scholars\nalign with the expectations of the EE framework. For these scholars, HVs\ntypically emerge and stabilize after approximately 15-20 publications.\nAdditionally, scholars with higher h-indexes or a greater number of\npublications, tend to have higher-ranking journals as their HVs.","PeriodicalId":501285,"journal":{"name":"arXiv - CS - Digital Libraries","volume":"51 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"arXiv - CS - Digital Libraries","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/arxiv-2409.12158","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Scholarly communication is vital to scientific advancement, enabling the
exchange of ideas and knowledge. When selecting publication venues, scholars
consider various factors, such as journal relevance, reputation, outreach, and
editorial standards and practices. However, some of these factors are
inconspicuous or inconsistent across venues and individual publications. This
study proposes that scholars' decision-making process can be conceptualized and
explored through the biologically inspired exploration-exploitation (EE)
framework, which posits that scholars balance between familiar and
under-explored publication venues. Building on the EE framework, we introduce a
grounded definition for "Home Venues" (HVs) - an informal concept used to
describe the set of venues where a scholar consistently publishes - and
investigate their emergence and key characteristics. Our analysis reveals that
the publication patterns of roughly three-quarters of computer science scholars
align with the expectations of the EE framework. For these scholars, HVs
typically emerge and stabilize after approximately 15-20 publications.
Additionally, scholars with higher h-indexes or a greater number of
publications, tend to have higher-ranking journals as their HVs.
学术交流对科学进步至关重要,它使思想和知识的交流成为可能。在选择出版场所时,学者们会考虑各种因素,如期刊的相关性、声誉、外联以及编辑标准和实践。然而,其中一些因素在不同的出版场所和单个出版物中并不明显或不一致。本研究提出,学者的决策过程可以通过生物学启发的探索-开发(EE)框架进行概念化和探索,该框架认为学者会在熟悉的和探索不足的发表场所之间进行权衡。在 EE 框架的基础上,我们引入了 "主场"(HVs)的基础定义--这是一个非正式的概念,用于描述学者持续发表论文的场所--并研究了它们的出现和主要特征。我们的分析表明,大约四分之三的计算机科学学者的发表模式符合 EE 框架的预期。此外,h 指数较高或发表论文数量较多的学者倾向于将排名较高的期刊作为其 HV。