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Social Network and Content Analysis of the North American Carbon Program as a Scientific Community of Practice

Source Publication
Social Networks
Date Issued
January 1, 2016
Author(s)
Brown, Molly E
Ihli, Monica Inez  
Hendrick, Oscar
Delgado-Arias, Sabrina
Escobar, Vanessa M
Griffith, Peter
DOI
doi:10.1016/j.socnet.2015.10.002
Permanent URI
https://trace.tennessee.edu/handle/20.500.14382/48491
Abstract

The North American Carbon Program (NACP) was formed to further the scientific understanding of sources, sinks, and stocks of carbon in Earth's environment. Carbon cycle science integrates multidisciplinary research, providing decision-support information for managing climate and carbon-related change across multiple sectors of society. This investigation uses the conceptual framework of communities of practice (CoP) to explore the role that the NACP has played in connecting researchers into a carbon cycle knowledge network, and in enabling them to conduct physical science that includes ideas from social science. A CoP describes the communities formed when people consistently engage in shared communication and activities towards a common passion or learning goal. We apply the CoP model by using keyword analysis of abstracts from scientific publications to analyze the research outputs of the NACP in terms of its knowledge domain. We also construct a co-authorship network from the publications of core NACP members, describe the structure and social pathways within the community. Results of the content analysis indicate that the NACP community of practice has substantially expanded its research on human and social impacts on the carbon cycle, contributing to a better understanding of how human and physical processes interact with one another. Results of the co-authorship social network analysis demonstrate that the NACP has formed a tightly connected community with many social pathways through which knowledge may flow, and that it has also expanded its network of institutions involved in carbon cycle research over the past seven years.

Subjects

North American Carbon...

Disciplines
Earth Sciences
Other Communication
Scholarly Communication
Recommended Citation
Brown, M. E., Ihli, M., Hendrick, O., Delgado-Arias, S., Escobar, V. M., & Griffith, P. (2016). Social network and content analysis of the North American Carbon Program as a scientific community of practice. Social Networks, 44, 226-237.
Submission Type
Post-print
Embargo Date
January 1, 2019
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

NACP_CoP___2016___Social_Networks.pdf

Size

909.38 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

93110816f6245cc7de1799a41bc2fab4

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