论文标题
科学和技术知识网络中高阶结构的出现
The Emergence of Higher-Order Structure in Scientific and Technological Knowledge Networks
论文作者
论文摘要
科学技术的增长是一个重组过程,其中新发现和发明是根据先验知识构建的。然而,关于科学和技术知识发展并融合成能够或限制未来突破的较大结构的方式相对较少。网络科学最近已成为衡量知识结构和动态的框架。尽管有帮助,但现有的方法努力捕获基础网络的全球性质,从而导致对科学和技术进步性质的观察矛盾。我们使用来自代数拓扑的工具来弥合这一方法论差距,以表征整个规模的科学和技术知识网络的高阶结构。我们观察到许多科学和技术领域的知识高阶结构的快速增长。使用传统的网络测量无法观察到这种增长。我们进一步证明,高阶结构的出现与低阶结构的下降一致,并且历史上远远超过了科学和技术协作网络中高阶结构的相应出现。直到一点点,高阶结构的增加与更好的结果有关,这是通过论文和专利的新颖性和影响来衡量的。但是,在高阶制度下产生的科学和技术的性质似乎在质上不同于低阶的科学和技术,前者表现出更大的语言抽象性和在先前的知识流以建立的倾向更大的倾向。
The growth of science and technology is a recombinative process, wherein new discoveries and inventions are built from prior knowledge. Yet relatively little is known about the manner in which scientific and technological knowledge develop and coalesce into larger structures that enable or constrain future breakthroughs. Network science has recently emerged as a framework for measuring the structure and dynamics of knowledge. While helpful, existing approaches struggle to capture the global properties of the underlying networks, leading to conflicting observations about the nature of scientific and technological progress. We bridge this methodological gap using tools from algebraic topology to characterize the higher-order structure of knowledge networks in science and technology across scale. We observe rapid growth in the higher-order structure of knowledge in many scientific and technological fields. This growth is not observable using traditional network measures. We further demonstrate that the emergence of higher-order structure coincides with decline in lower-order structure, and has historically far outpaced the corresponding emergence of higher-order structure in scientific and technological collaboration networks. Up to a point, increases in higher-order structure are associated with better outcomes, as measured by the novelty and impact of papers and patents. However, the nature of science and technology produced under higher-order regimes also appears to be qualitatively different from that produced under lower-order ones, with the former exhibiting greater linguistic abstractness and greater tendencies for building upon prior streams of knowledge.