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Social Studies of Science | 2005

Collaboration Paradox Scientific Productivity, the Internet, and Problems of Research in Developing Areas

Ricardo B. Duque; Marcus Antonius Ynalvez; Radhamany Sooryamoorthy; Pn Mbatia; Dan-Bright S. Dzorgbo; Wesley Shrum

We examine the ways in which the research process differs in developed and developing areas by focusing on two questions. First, is collaboration associated with productivity? Second, is access to the Internet (specifically use of email) associated with reduced problems of collaboration? Recent analyses by Lee & Bozeman (2005) and Walsh & Maloney (2003) suggest affirmative answers to these questions for US scientists. Based on a comparative analysis of scientists in Ghana, Kenya, and the State of Kerala in south-western India (N 918), we find that: (1) collaboration is not associated with any general increment in productivity; and (2) while access to email does attenuate research problems, such difficulties are structured more by national and regional context than by the collaborative process itself. The interpretation of these results suggests a paradox that raises issues for future studies: those conditions that unsettle the relationship between collaboration and productivity in developing areas may undermine the collaborative benefits of new information and communication technologies.


Scientometrics | 2009

Do types of collaboration change citation? Collaboration and citation patterns of South African science publications

Radhamany Sooryamoorthy

Bibliographic records are extensively used in the study of citations. Based on ISI data, this paper examines citation patterns of the publications of South African scientists in recent years. In particular, the focus of this paper is on citations as to the collaborative dimensions of South African scientists in their publications. The study reveals that the number of citations received by a publication varies not only according to the collaboration but also to the types of collaboration of the authors who are involved in its production. Furthermore, it emerges that the impact of citations on publications differs from discipline to discipline, and affiliating sector to sector, regardless of collaboration.


Scientometrics | 2009

Collaboration and publication: How collaborative are scientists in South Africa?

Radhamany Sooryamoorthy

Using bibliographic records from the Science Citation Index, the paper examines the publication of South African scientists. The analysis shows that collaboration research in South Africa has been growing steadily and the scientists are highly oriented towards collaborative rather than individualistic research. International collaboration is preferred to domestic collaboration while publication seems to be a decisive factor in collaboration. The paper also looks at the collaboration dimensions of partnering countries, sectors and disciplines, and examines how collaboration can be predicted by certain publication variables. Characteristic features are evident in both the degree and nature of collaboration which can be predicted by the number of countries involved, number of partners and the fractional count of papers.


Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication | 2007

Does the Internet Promote Collaboration and Productivity? Evidence from the Scientific Community in South Africa

Radhamany Sooryamoorthy; Wesley Shrum

International collaboration among scientists has been passionately advocated by many in the developing world. Among the several conditions that support collaboration among members of a dispersed scientific community, Internet technology is crucial. We examine the relationships among electronic communication, collaboration, and productivity in South Africa, a country that has undergone remarkable change in the sphere of science and technology. We surveyed 275 scientists in selected research institutes and universities in the province of KwaZulu-Natal to address the questions: Is greater use of the Internet associated with international collaboration? Are collaboration and Internet use associated with publication in national and foreign journals? The results show that: (1) Internet use, as measured by time spent on email, is positively associated with collaboration; (2) collaboration is not generally related to publication productivity; and (3) there is little evidence that South African academics benefit from international collaboration. While scientists who use email intensively are slightly more productive, this is not the case for foreign productivity in the case of academic scientists.


Scientometrics | 2010

Can the centre–periphery model explain patterns of international scientific collaboration among threshold and industrialised countries? The case of South Africa and Germany

Torben Schubert; Radhamany Sooryamoorthy

As scientific collaboration is a phenomenon that is becoming increasingly important, studies on scientific collaboration are numerous. Despite the proliferation of studies on various dimensions of collaboration, there is still a dearth of analyses on the effects, motives and modes of collaboration in the context of developing countries. Adopting Wallerstein’s world-system theory, this paper makes use of bibliometric data in an attempt to understand the pattern of collaboration that emerges between South Africa and Germany. The key argument is that we can expect the collaborative relationship between South Africa and Germany to be one that is shaped by a centre–periphery pattern. The analyses show that a theory of scientific collaboration building on the notion of marginality and centre–periphery can explain many facets of South African–German collaboration, where South Africa is a semi-peripheral region, a centre for the periphery, and a periphery for the centre.


Scientometrics | 2005

When do scientists “adopt” the Internet? Dimensions of connectivity in developing areas

Marcus Antonius Ynalvez; Ricardo B. Duque; Pn Mbatia; Radhamany Sooryamoorthy; Antony Palackal; Wesley Shrum

SummaryWe examine the diffusion of information and communication technologies (ICTs) in the knowledge production sectors of three developing areas. Using interviews with 918 scientists in one South Asian and two African locations, we address three fundamental questions: (1) To what degree has the research community in the developing world adopted the Internet? (2) How can the disparities in Internet adoption best be characterized? (3) To what extent is Internet use associated with research productivity? Our findings indicate that while the vast majority of scientists describe themselves as current email users, far fewer have ready access to the technology, use it in diverse ways, or have extensive experience. These results are consistent with the notion that Internet adoption should not be characterized as a single act on the part of users. The rapid development of the Internet and the cumulative skills required for its effective use are equally important, particularly its impact on productivity. These findings lead us to qualify crude generalizations about the diffusion of the Internet in developing areas.


Scientometrics | 2010

Medical research in South Africa: a scientometric analysis of trends, patterns, productivity and partnership

Radhamany Sooryamoorthy

Being a scientifically active country in Africa, South Africa has made significant strides in the production of scientific publications. Medicine is one branch of science that has achieved a remarkable position in this regard. Extracting and analyzing medical publications for three decades and at regular intervals (1975–2005) from the SCI database, this paper pioneers an attempt to find out whether the reported pace of growth in the production of scientific papers in medicine is an effect of partnerships that scholars have with their counterparts within the organization, within the country, or with those in other countries. This paper also presents the unique patterns of scientific research in medicine, taking into account factors such as the count and fractional count of papers, citations, trends of growth, sectoral participation, partners, and publication outlets, and seeks to provide new insights into the directions medical science is taking in South Africa today.


New Media & Society | 2008

Untangling the technology cluster: mobile telephony, internet use and the location of social ties

Radhamany Sooryamoorthy; B. Paige Miller; Wesley Shrum

Among the communication technologies introduced in the developing world during the past century, none has grown more rapidly than mobile telephony.Yet the impact of mobile phone use on social relationships has received limited systematic study. This article examines the factors associated with mobile phone usage in the south Indian state of Kerala and the social structural consequences of such usage, particularly the composition and location of the social ties maintained through mobile technologies. Bivariate analysis of mobile phone usage and network composition shows that frequent users have fewer local ties and more external ties than non-frequent users. However, these effects are due largely to the association of email and mobile phone use. The article shows that internet use increases, while mobile phone use decreases the geographical diversity of social ties. The implication is that mobile telephony and internet technologies may have different consequences for the globalization process.


Scientometrics | 2010

Science and scientific collaboration in South Africa: apartheid and after

Radhamany Sooryamoorthy

Scientific collaboration is growing in its importance; more so in Asian and African countries. This paper examines the scenario of science and scientific collaboration in South Africa which had passed through the colonial and apartheid regimes before it became a democracy in 1994. South African science under distinct political periods moved through some difficult periods but it did not badly affect the progress and direction of South African science. Science and scientific collaboration continued to grow under its major political phases amidst serious challenges. Despite internal conflict and boycott by the international scientific community, South Africa could move onto a stable and steady path of growth in science and collaboration under apartheid which is being carried on in the new South Africa. Collaborative research is encouraged at various levels of knowledge production and in science. The importance science and scientific development is gaining in today’s South Africa is remarkable.


International Sociology | 2008

Untouchability in Modern India

Radhamany Sooryamoorthy

Lakshman Gaikwad, a school child, once wrote a letter to the then Prime Minister of India, Indira Gandhi: ‘Is it because of the reason that I was born as an Uchalya I do not have good clothes, not getting any food, or not even a good look from others?’ Attired now in beautiful clothes and enjoying the food that was once denied to him, this Dalit boy was later to become an eminent Marathi writer, activist and a recipient of the Kendra Sahitya Academy, a prestigious award for literature in India. Untouchability, prescribed and practised as part of the age-old institution of the caste system, is thriving in the largest democracy in the world. The caste system is a very complex institution consisting of innumerable Hindu ideas rooted in pollution, purity, social units of jatis, varnas and dharmas. The caste system maintains its hold over the prevailing social structure and is manifest, both covertly and overtly, in several realms of social intercourse (Sooryamoorthy, 2006). As a non-comparable form of racial stratification, the caste system divides the society into permanent groups that are specialized, hierarchically arranged and separated in matters

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Wesley Shrum

Louisiana State University

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Pn Mbatia

University of Nairobi

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B. Paige Miller

Louisiana State University

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Ricardo B. Duque

Louisiana State University

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Shaun Ruggunan

University of KwaZulu-Natal

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S. Ruggunan

University of KwaZulu-Natal

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