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Author(s)

Lingfei Wu

Aniket Kittur

Hyejin Youn

Stasa Milojevic

Erin Leahey

Stephen Fiore

Yong Yeol Ahn

What science does, what science could do, and how to make science work? If we want to know the answers to these questions, we need to be able to uncover the structures and mechanisms of science, in addition to the metrics that are easily collectable and quantifiable. In this review article, we link metrics to mechanisms, by demonstrating how emerging metrics not only offer complementaries to the existing metrics, but also shed light on the underlying social organization and function of science. Based on fundamental properties of science emerging across the units of analysis, we classify existing theories and findings into, hot and cold science referring to attention to scientific fields, fast and slow science reflecting productivity of scientists and teams, soft and hard science revealing reproducibility of research papers. We suggest that curiosity about social mechanisms of science since Derek J. de Solla Price, Eugene Garfield, Robert K. Merton, and many others complement the zeitgeist in pursuing new, complex metrics without understanding the underlying processes.
Date Published: 2022
Citations: Wu, Lingfei, Aniket Kittur, Hyejin Youn, Stasa Milojevic, Erin Leahey, Stephen Fiore, Yong Yeol Ahn. 2022. Metrics and Mechanisms: Measuring the Unmeasurable in the Science of Science. Journal of Informetrics.