International scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV : a network analysis

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Vanni, Tázio
Data de Publicação: 2014
Outros Autores: Mesa-Frias, Marco, Sanchez-Garcia, Ruben, Roesler, Rafael, Schwartsmann, Gilberto, Goldani, Marcelo Zubaran, Foss, Anna M.
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Institucional da UFRGS
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/10183/194132
Resumo: Research endeavours require the collaborative effort of an increasing number of individuals. International scientific collaborations are particularly important for HIV and HPV co-infection studies, since the burden of disease is rising in developing countries, but most experts and research funds are found in developed countries, where the prevalence of HIV is low. The objective of our study was to investigate patterns of international scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV research using social network analysis. Through a systematic review of the literature, we obtained epidemiological data, as well as data on countries and authors involved in co-infection studies. The collaboration network was analysed in respect to the following: centrality, density, modularity, connected components, distance, clustering and spectral clustering. We observed that for many low- and middle-income countries there were no epidemiological estimates of HPV infection of the cervix among HIV-infected individuals. Most studies found only involved researchers from the same country (64%) Studies derived from international collaborations including high-income countries and either low- or middle-income countries had on average three times larger sample sizes than those including only high-income countries or low-income countries. The high global clustering coefficient (0.9) coupled with a short average distance between researchers (4.34) suggests a ‘‘small-world phenomenon.’’ Researchers from high-income countries seem to have higher degree centrality and tend to cluster together in densely connected communities. We found a large well-connected community, which encompasses 70% of researchers, and 49 other small isolated communities. Our findings suggest that in the field of HIV and HPV, there seems to be both room and incentives for researchers to engage in collaborations between countries of different income-level. Through international collaboration resources available to researchers in high-income countries can be efficiently used to enroll more participants in low- and middle-income countries.
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spelling Vanni, TázioMesa-Frias, MarcoSanchez-Garcia, RubenRoesler, RafaelSchwartsmann, GilbertoGoldani, Marcelo ZubaranFoss, Anna M.2019-05-11T02:37:30Z20141932-6203http://hdl.handle.net/10183/194132000980171Research endeavours require the collaborative effort of an increasing number of individuals. International scientific collaborations are particularly important for HIV and HPV co-infection studies, since the burden of disease is rising in developing countries, but most experts and research funds are found in developed countries, where the prevalence of HIV is low. The objective of our study was to investigate patterns of international scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV research using social network analysis. Through a systematic review of the literature, we obtained epidemiological data, as well as data on countries and authors involved in co-infection studies. The collaboration network was analysed in respect to the following: centrality, density, modularity, connected components, distance, clustering and spectral clustering. We observed that for many low- and middle-income countries there were no epidemiological estimates of HPV infection of the cervix among HIV-infected individuals. Most studies found only involved researchers from the same country (64%) Studies derived from international collaborations including high-income countries and either low- or middle-income countries had on average three times larger sample sizes than those including only high-income countries or low-income countries. The high global clustering coefficient (0.9) coupled with a short average distance between researchers (4.34) suggests a ‘‘small-world phenomenon.’’ Researchers from high-income countries seem to have higher degree centrality and tend to cluster together in densely connected communities. We found a large well-connected community, which encompasses 70% of researchers, and 49 other small isolated communities. Our findings suggest that in the field of HIV and HPV, there seems to be both room and incentives for researchers to engage in collaborations between countries of different income-level. Through international collaboration resources available to researchers in high-income countries can be efficiently used to enroll more participants in low- and middle-income countries.application/pdfengPLoS ONE. San Francisco. Vol. 9, no. 3 (Mar. 2014), e93376, 8 p.Infecções por HIVInfecções por papillomavirusComportamento cooperativoPaíses em desenvolvimentoClasse socialInternational scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV : a network analysisEstrangeiroinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Institucional da UFRGSinstname:Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)instacron:UFRGSTEXT000980171.pdf.txt000980171.pdf.txtExtracted Texttext/plain36121http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/194132/2/000980171.pdf.txt9e039bad64f640e0322ef43f6608eff3MD52ORIGINAL000980171.pdfTexto completo (inglês)application/pdf1253951http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/194132/1/000980171.pdfb95e04ac32d571bcec3046dd049d7bfbMD5110183/1941322019-10-05 03:55:29.283277oai:www.lume.ufrgs.br:10183/194132Repositório de PublicaçõesPUBhttps://lume.ufrgs.br/oai/requestopendoar:2019-10-05T06:55:29Repositório Institucional da UFRGS - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)false
dc.title.pt_BR.fl_str_mv International scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV : a network analysis
title International scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV : a network analysis
spellingShingle International scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV : a network analysis
Vanni, Tázio
Infecções por HIV
Infecções por papillomavirus
Comportamento cooperativo
Países em desenvolvimento
Classe social
title_short International scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV : a network analysis
title_full International scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV : a network analysis
title_fullStr International scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV : a network analysis
title_full_unstemmed International scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV : a network analysis
title_sort International scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV : a network analysis
author Vanni, Tázio
author_facet Vanni, Tázio
Mesa-Frias, Marco
Sanchez-Garcia, Ruben
Roesler, Rafael
Schwartsmann, Gilberto
Goldani, Marcelo Zubaran
Foss, Anna M.
author_role author
author2 Mesa-Frias, Marco
Sanchez-Garcia, Ruben
Roesler, Rafael
Schwartsmann, Gilberto
Goldani, Marcelo Zubaran
Foss, Anna M.
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Vanni, Tázio
Mesa-Frias, Marco
Sanchez-Garcia, Ruben
Roesler, Rafael
Schwartsmann, Gilberto
Goldani, Marcelo Zubaran
Foss, Anna M.
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Infecções por HIV
Infecções por papillomavirus
Comportamento cooperativo
Países em desenvolvimento
Classe social
topic Infecções por HIV
Infecções por papillomavirus
Comportamento cooperativo
Países em desenvolvimento
Classe social
description Research endeavours require the collaborative effort of an increasing number of individuals. International scientific collaborations are particularly important for HIV and HPV co-infection studies, since the burden of disease is rising in developing countries, but most experts and research funds are found in developed countries, where the prevalence of HIV is low. The objective of our study was to investigate patterns of international scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV research using social network analysis. Through a systematic review of the literature, we obtained epidemiological data, as well as data on countries and authors involved in co-infection studies. The collaboration network was analysed in respect to the following: centrality, density, modularity, connected components, distance, clustering and spectral clustering. We observed that for many low- and middle-income countries there were no epidemiological estimates of HPV infection of the cervix among HIV-infected individuals. Most studies found only involved researchers from the same country (64%) Studies derived from international collaborations including high-income countries and either low- or middle-income countries had on average three times larger sample sizes than those including only high-income countries or low-income countries. The high global clustering coefficient (0.9) coupled with a short average distance between researchers (4.34) suggests a ‘‘small-world phenomenon.’’ Researchers from high-income countries seem to have higher degree centrality and tend to cluster together in densely connected communities. We found a large well-connected community, which encompasses 70% of researchers, and 49 other small isolated communities. Our findings suggest that in the field of HIV and HPV, there seems to be both room and incentives for researchers to engage in collaborations between countries of different income-level. Through international collaboration resources available to researchers in high-income countries can be efficiently used to enroll more participants in low- and middle-income countries.
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dc.relation.ispartof.pt_BR.fl_str_mv PLoS ONE. San Francisco. Vol. 9, no. 3 (Mar. 2014), e93376, 8 p.
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