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Identifying Scientific and Technical “Unicorns” Cover

Identifying Scientific and Technical “Unicorns”

By: Lucy L. Xu,  Miao Qi and  Fred Y. Ye  
Open Access
|Sep 2020

Abstract

Purpose

Using the metaphor of “unicorn,” we identify the scientific papers and technical patents characterized by the informetric feature of very high citations in the first ten years after publishing, which may provide a new pattern to understand very high impact works in science and technology.

Design/methodology/approach

When we set CT as the total citations of papers or patents in the first ten years after publication, with CT≥ 5,000 for scientific “unicorn” and CT≥ 500 for technical “unicorn,” we have an absolute standard for identifying scientific and technical “unicorn” publications.

Findings

We identify 165 scientific “unicorns” in 14,301,875 WoS papers and 224 technical “unicorns” in 13,728,950 DII patents during 2001–2012. About 50% of “unicorns” belong to biomedicine, in which selected cases are individually discussed. The rare “unicorns” increase following linear model, the fitting data show 95% confidence with the RMSE of scientific “unicorn” is 0.2127 while the RMSE of technical “unicorn” is 0.0923.

Research limitations

A “unicorn” is a pure quantitative consideration without concerning its quality, and “potential unicorns” as CT≤5,000 for papers and CT≤500 for patents are left in future studies.

Practical implications

Scientific and technical “unicorns” provide a new pattern to understand high-impact works in science and technology. The “unicorn” pattern supplies a concise approach to identify very high-impact scientific papers and technical patents.

Originality/value

The “unicorn” pattern supplies a concise approach to identify very high impact scientific papers and technical patents.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/jdis-2021-0002 | Journal eISSN: 2543-683X | Journal ISSN: 2096-157X
Language: English
Page range: 96 - 115
Submitted on: Mar 1, 2020
Accepted on: Jul 24, 2020
Published on: Sep 22, 2020
Published by: Chinese Academy of Sciences, National Science Library
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2020 Lucy L. Xu, Miao Qi, Fred Y. Ye, published by Chinese Academy of Sciences, National Science Library
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.