6533b86efe1ef96bd12cbdbf
RESEARCH PRODUCT
[Spanish medical center collaboration on smoking research from 1999 through 2003 according to the Science Citation Index].
Francisco García RíoJuan Carlos Valderrama ZuriánJosé Ignacio De Granda OriveRafael Aleixandre BenaventAdolfo Alonso ArroyoSantiago José Villanueva Serranosubject
GerontologyBiomedical Researchbusiness.industryCollaborative networkClosenessSmokingScience Citation IndexLibrary scienceGeneral MedicineBetweenness centralitySpainHealth careMedicineCenter (algebra and category theory)businessCentralityAlcantaradescription
OBJECTIVE To analyze the network structure of collaboration between medical centers sharing authorship of scientific articles on smoking. MATERIAL AND METHODS Articles reporting smoking research by authors from 2 or more Spanish medical centers between 1999 and the end of 2003 were identified through the Science Citation Index. The network of collaboration behind the research was analyzed and the most important measures of centrality were compared. To display the data, scientometric maps were constructed using UCINET and NETDRAW network analysis tools. RESULTS Thirty-five Spanish medical centers (29 hospitals and 6 health care clinics) in 8 autonomous communities were involved in 21 collaborative research projects. Hospital de La Princesa was the network core institution with the highest degrees of nodal (16), closeness (88.66), and betweenness (39) centrality. Other core nodes in the network were the following hospitals: de Cruces, San Pedro de Alcantara, La Paz, Vall d'Hebron, and General Yague. The autonomous communities of Castile and Leon, Madrid, and Catalonia were assigned positions at the core of the intercommunity collaborative network based on coauthorship of scientific papers shared among their medical centers. CONCLUSIONS Network analysis helps identify the most influential institutions in a scientific community that generates coauthored articles in the field of smoking research. Hospital de la Princesa had the highest measures of centrality. The autonomous communities of Castile and Leon, Madrid, and Catalonia form a highly connected, cohesive subgroup within the network.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2007-08-01 | Archivos de bronconeumologia |