Computational Model Library

Perceived Scientific Value and Impact Factor (1.0.0)

The model explores the impact of journal metrics, for example the notorious impact factor (IF), on the perception that academics have of an article’s scientific value. The agent-based simulation maps two sets of individuals that belong to two distinct groups or intelligence units (IU): IF lovers (enthusiasts or IU2 members) and IF haters (skeptics or IU1 members). Papers in the simulation are assigned random values of IF different from their inner scientific value. At a given time, all agents are called to evaluate two papers. The enthusiasts would use the IF of the journal the article is published in as a proxy to evaluate its value while skeptics would tend to assess as a function of the paper’s assigned value. Both cases then reflect on the perception of scientific value that members from IU1 and IU2 have of academic publications in general.

The aim of the model is that of showing that there are at least three dimensions that affect how agents cognize about science. There is an individual (micro) dimension that entails individual characteristics and attitudes towards others, together with a structural (macro) dimension that provides the institutional conditions for operating (IF can be thought of as belonging to an institutional or macro category). Then, there is a meso domain that reflects the social sphere of interactions that one has within the affiliated group and the other groups. The three dimensions together define organizational cognition, with the middle (or meso) one being the most relevant. We call it social organizing.

The model explores how the perception of scientific value (PSV) modifies depending on these three dimensions in which cognition can be studied. Would PSV be different depending on affiliation, position, range, or individual characteristics?

OC_and_IF_interface.png

Release Notes

Details on this version are in the PDF (see below). There entire set of data is a file too large to be uploaded; however, we have uploaded data from one of the computational experiments. Enjoy!

Associated Publications

Secchi, D., & Cowley S.J. 2018. Modeling Organizational Cognition: The Case
of Impact Factor. Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation 21(1) 13
Doi: 10.18564/jasss.3628
Url: http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/21/1/13.html

This release is out-of-date. The latest version is 1.1.0

Perceived Scientific Value and Impact Factor 1.0.0

The model explores the impact of journal metrics, for example the notorious impact factor (IF), on the perception that academics have of an article’s scientific value. The agent-based simulation maps two sets of individuals that belong to two distinct groups or intelligence units (IU): IF lovers (enthusiasts or IU2 members) and IF haters (skeptics or IU1 members). Papers in the simulation are assigned random values of IF different from their inner scientific value. At a given time, all agents are called to evaluate two papers. The enthusiasts would use the IF of the journal the article is published in as a proxy to evaluate its value while skeptics would tend to assess as a function of the paper’s assigned value. Both cases then reflect on the perception of scientific value that members from IU1 and IU2 have of academic publications in general.

The aim of the model is that of showing that there are at least three dimensions that affect how agents cognize about science. There is an individual (micro) dimension that entails individual characteristics and attitudes towards others, together with a structural (macro) dimension that provides the institutional conditions for operating (IF can be thought of as belonging to an institutional or macro category). Then, there is a meso domain that reflects the social sphere of interactions that one has within the affiliated group and the other groups. The three dimensions together define organizational cognition, with the middle (or meso) one being the most relevant. We call it social organizing.

The model explores how the perception of scientific value (PSV) modifies depending on these three dimensions in which cognition can be studied. Would PSV be different depending on affiliation, position, range, or individual characteristics?

Release Notes

Details on this version are in the PDF (see below). There entire set of data is a file too large to be uploaded; however, we have uploaded data from one of the computational experiments. Enjoy!

Version Submitter First published Last modified Status
1.1.0 Davide Secchi Mon Jan 29 09:45:53 2018 Sun Feb 18 07:23:41 2018 Published
1.0.0 Davide Secchi Wed Apr 12 03:29:15 2017 Tue Feb 20 14:21:55 2018 Published

Discussion

This website uses cookies and Google Analytics to help us track user engagement and improve our site. If you'd like to know more information about what data we collect and why, please see our data privacy policy. If you continue to use this site, you consent to our use of cookies.
Accept