Which fields drive the h-index: Difference between revisions

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'''[https://www.topitalianscientists.org/tis/52685/Paolo_Giudici_-_Top_Italian_Scientist_in_Mathematics Paolo Giudici]'''<sup>(a)</sup>, Luca Boscolo'''<sup>(b)</sup>.
'''[https://www.topitalianscientists.org/tis/52685/Paolo_Giudici_-_Top_Italian_Scientist_in_Mathematics Paolo Giudici]'''<sup>(a)</sup>, Luca Boscolo'''<sup>(b)</sup>.


<sup>(a)</sup> Department of Economics and Management Sciences, University of Pavia, Italy -
<sup>(a)</sup> Department of Economics and Management Sciences, University of Pavia, Italy
 
<sup>(b)</sup> Top Italian Scientists founder.
<sup>(b)</sup> Top Italian Scientists founder.



Revision as of 10:26, 16 September 2024

Published
September 16, 2024
Title
Which fields drive the h-index?
Authors
Paolo Giudici, Luca Boscolo.
DOI
10.62684/FSOZ4761
Keywords
H-index, Poisson models, Scaling

Paolo Giudici(a), Luca Boscolo(b).

(a) Department of Economics and Management Sciences, University of Pavia, Italy

(b) Top Italian Scientists founder.

Abstract

The measurement of the quality of academic research is often done by means of the h-index measure. Although widely accepted, the h-index has some issues and, in particular, it may depend on the scientific field in which a researcher operates. To date there is not a definitive answer as to whether this difference holds, and to what extent it varies. To fill the gap, we propose to operationaly measure the difference in h-index across the sectors of a relatively homogeneous population of all scientists of a nation. To answer the heterogeneity issue we apply three different explainable machine learning models: linear regression, Poisson regression and tree models. Our results show that the latter two models better explain the data. They show that the only sectors for which a difference in h-index is significant are Physics, Biology and Clinical Sciences.

Declarations

Conflict of Interest

The Authors declare that there is no conflict of interest.

References