Mixed-membership models of scientific publications
E Erosheva, S Fienberg… - Proceedings of the …, 2004 - National Acad Sciences
E Erosheva, S Fienberg, J Lafferty
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2004•National Acad SciencesPNAS is one of world's most cited multidisciplinary scientific journals. The PNAS official
classification structure of subjects is reflected in topic labels submitted by the authors of
articles, largely related to traditionally established disciplines. These include broad field
classifications into physical sciences, biological sciences, social sciences, and further
subtopic classifications within the fields. Focusing on biological sciences, we explore an
internal soft-classification structure of articles based only on semantic decompositions of …
classification structure of subjects is reflected in topic labels submitted by the authors of
articles, largely related to traditionally established disciplines. These include broad field
classifications into physical sciences, biological sciences, social sciences, and further
subtopic classifications within the fields. Focusing on biological sciences, we explore an
internal soft-classification structure of articles based only on semantic decompositions of …
PNAS is one of world's most cited multidisciplinary scientific journals. The PNAS official classification structure of subjects is reflected in topic labels submitted by the authors of articles, largely related to traditionally established disciplines. These include broad field classifications into physical sciences, biological sciences, social sciences, and further subtopic classifications within the fields. Focusing on biological sciences, we explore an internal soft-classification structure of articles based only on semantic decompositions of abstracts and bibliographies and compare it with the formal discipline classifications. Our model assumes that there is a fixed number of internal categories, each characterized by multinomial distributions over words (in abstracts) and references (in bibliographies). Soft classification for each article is based on proportions of the article's content coming from each category. We discuss the appropriateness of the model for the PNAS database as well as other features of the data relevant to soft classification.
National Acad Sciences