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Bogers, Toine; Larsen, Birger; Koolen, Marijn; Gäde, Maria; Hall, Mark M. and Petras, Vivien
(2023).
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3576840.3578276
Abstract
We studied the collaboration patterns of CHIIR authors, and found that most papers are collaborative. A core of 33% of the CHIIR researchers are directly connected and frequently co-author, and several disconnected clusters also make frequent CHIIR contributions. We also studied citation impact of the CHIIR papers and show that in relation to research design type, theoretical and empirical papers tend to receive more citations than resource papers. With regards to sharing and re-use, papers that share at least one resource tend to have significantly higher citation impact—in particular when sharing data resources and design resources. Re-using resources does not significantly increase citation impact in itself.