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International scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV: a network analysis

International scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV: a network analysis
International scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV: a network analysis
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.

1932-6203
Vanni, Tazio
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Mesa-Frias, Marco
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Sanchez-Garcia, Ruben
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Roesler, Rafael
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Schwartsmann, Gilberto
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Goldani, Marcelo
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Foss, Anna
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Vanni, Tazio
7bdee741-d1ab-4c83-b8a4-7fb6f0f3e39b
Mesa-Frias, Marco
abaa04b0-a79f-4e70-aee3-2c3eaa4810c4
Sanchez-Garcia, Ruben
8246cea2-ae1c-44f2-94e9-bacc9371c3ed
Roesler, Rafael
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Schwartsmann, Gilberto
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Goldani, Marcelo
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Foss, Anna
c3b8d79d-eea6-422f-b2a7-3f41f4d99be2

Vanni, Tazio, Mesa-Frias, Marco, Sanchez-Garcia, Ruben, Roesler, Rafael, Schwartsmann, Gilberto, Goldani, Marcelo and Foss, Anna (2014) International scientific collaboration in HIV and HPV: a network analysis. PLoS ONE. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0093376).

Record type: Article

Abstract

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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Published date: 28 March 2014
Organisations: Applied Mathematics

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 363674
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/363674
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 140b36ab-493f-4e82-adff-ce98a7fc1557
ORCID for Ruben Sanchez-Garcia: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6479-3028

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Date deposited: 31 Mar 2014 08:47
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:36

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Contributors

Author: Tazio Vanni
Author: Marco Mesa-Frias
Author: Rafael Roesler
Author: Gilberto Schwartsmann
Author: Marcelo Goldani
Author: Anna Foss

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