Can first or last name uniqueness help to identify diaspora researchers from any country?

M. Thelwall
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Abstract

Abstract Purpose Diaspora researchers work in one country but have ancestral origins in another, either through moves during a research career (mobile diaspora researchers) or by starting research in the target country (embedded diaspora researchers). Whilst mobile researchers might be tracked through affiliation changes in bibliometric databases, embedded researchers cannot. This article reports an evidence-based discussion of which countries’ diaspora researchers can be partially tracked using first or last names, addressing this limitation. Design/methodology/approach A frequency analysis of first and last names of authors of all Scopus journal articles 2001-2021 for 200 countries or regions. Findings There are great variations in the extent to which first or last names are uniquely national, from Monserrat (no unique first names) to Thailand (81% unique last names). Nevertheless, most countries have a subset of first or last names that are relatively unique. For the 50 countries with the most researchers, authors with relatively national names are always more likely to research their name-associated country, suggesting a continued national association. Lists of researchers’ first and last name frequencies and proportions are provided for 200 countries/regions. Research limitations Only one period is tracked (2001-2021) and no attempt was made to validate the ancestral origins of any researcher. Practical implications Simple name heuristics can be used to identify the international spread of a sample of most countries’ diaspora researchers, but some manual checks of individual names are needed to weed out false matches. This can supplement mobile researcher data from bibliometric databases. Originality/value This is the first attempt to list name associations for the authors of all countries and large regions, and to identify the countries for which diaspora researchers could be tracked by name.
名字或姓氏的独特性是否有助于识别来自任何国家的散居研究人员?
散居研究人员在一个国家工作,但祖先起源在另一个国家,要么通过在研究生涯中的迁移(流动散居研究人员),要么通过在目标国家开始研究(嵌入式散居研究人员)。虽然移动研究人员可以通过文献计量数据库的隶属关系变化来跟踪,但嵌入式研究人员却不能。本文报告了一项基于证据的讨论,讨论了哪些国家的侨民研究人员可以使用名字或姓氏进行部分追踪,从而解决了这一限制。设计/方法/方法对2001-2021年200个国家或地区的所有Scopus期刊文章的作者姓名进行频率分析。从蒙塞拉特(没有独特的名字)到泰国(81%的人有独特的姓氏),姓氏在多大程度上具有独特的民族特征存在很大差异。然而,大多数国家都有一个相对独特的名字或姓氏子集。在拥有最多研究人员的50个国家中,拥有相对国家名称的作者总是更有可能研究与他们名字相关的国家,这表明国家之间存在持续的联系。提供了200个国家/地区研究人员姓和名的频率和比例列表。研究局限只追踪了一个时期(2001-2021),没有试图验证任何研究人员的祖先起源。简单的名字启发式可以用来识别大多数国家的散居研究人员样本的国际传播,但需要对个别名字进行一些人工检查,以剔除错误的匹配。这可以补充来自文献计量数据库的移动研究人员数据。原创性/价值这是第一次尝试列出所有国家和大地区作者的名字联系,并确定可以通过名字跟踪侨民研究人员的国家。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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