Gingras Yves
Département d'histoire Universirté du Québec à Montréal C.P. 8888, Sue. Centre-Ville Montreal, QC H3C-3P8, Canada.
J Hist Biol. 2010 Spring;43(1):159-81. doi: 10.1007/s10739-009-9183-2.
The object of this paper is two-fold: first, to show that contrary to what seem to have become a widely accepted view among historians of biology, the famous 1953 first Nature paper of Watson and Crick on the structure of DNA was widely cited--as compared to the average paper of the time--on a continuous basis from the very year of its publication and over the period 1953-1970 and that the citations came from a wide array of scientific journals. A systematic analysis of the bibliometric data thus shows that Watson's and Crick's paper did in fact have immediate and long term impact if we define "impact" in terms of comparative citations with other papers of the time. In this precise sense it did not fall into "relative oblivion" in the scientific community. The second aim of this paper is to show, using the case of the reception of the Watson-Crick and Jacob-Monod papers as concrete examples, how large scale bibliometric data can be used in a sophisticated manner to provide information about the dynamic of the scientific field as a whole instead of limiting the analysis to a few major actors and generalizing the result to the whole community without further ado.
其一,表明与生物学史学家中似乎已成为广泛接受的观点相反,沃森和克里克1953年发表在《自然》杂志上关于DNA结构的著名首篇论文,自发表当年起直至1953年至1970年期间,与当时的普通论文相比,被持续广泛引用,且引用来自众多科学期刊。对文献计量数据的系统分析表明,如果我们根据与当时其他论文的比较引用情况来定义“影响力”,那么沃森和克里克的论文实际上确实产生了即时和长期的影响。从这个精确意义上讲,它在科学界并未陷入“相对被遗忘”的境地。本文的第二个目的是,以沃森 - 克里克论文和雅各布 - 莫诺论文的接受情况为例,展示如何以复杂的方式使用大规模文献计量数据,以提供有关整个科学领域动态的信息,而不是将分析局限于少数主要参与者,并在没有进一步论证的情况下将结果推广到整个科学界。