ArXiv TLDR

Persistent geographical biases in global scientific collaboration and citations

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2604.01602

Leyan Wu, Yong Huang, Wei Lu, Akrati Saxena, Vincent Traag

econ.GN

TLDR

Global scientific collaboration shows intensifying geographic biases, while citations are less distance-sensitive, with the US dominant and China undercited.

Key contributions

  • Geographic distance's effect on collaboration has intensified, not diminished.
  • Citation flows are less sensitive to spatial proximity, allowing freer intellectual diffusion.
  • Research networks exhibit strong domestic preferences and a shared citation orientation toward the US.
  • China is increasingly a collaboration partner but systematically undercited in global flows.

Why it matters

This paper highlights persistent geographical and national biases in global science, impacting equitable participation and recognition. Understanding these dynamics is crucial for fostering a more inclusive and balanced scientific ecosystem worldwide.

Original Abstract

Scientific knowledge flows enable cumulative progress by connecting researchers across disciplines, institutions, and countries. Yet it remains unclear how geography and national structures continue to shape these exchanges in an increasingly connected world. Using a large-scale bibliometric dataset from OpenAlex, which covers 39.35 million publications across 95 countries and 3,794 cities between 2000 and 2022, we examine global knowledge diffusion through two complementary channels: co-authorship and citation. We find that the constraining effect of geographic distance on collaboration has not diminished over time but has instead intensified, suggesting persistent structural or institutional barriers. Citation flows, by contrast, are less sensitive to spatial proximity, indicating that intellectual influence may diffuse more freely across borders. At the country level, research networks exhibit strong domestic preferences and a shared citation orientation toward the United States. China, while increasingly favored as a collaboration partner by other countries, continues to be systematically undercited within global citation flows. International mobility increases researchers' collaboration with scholars in their host country but has limited effects on citation flows. These results highlight the structural persistence of spatial and country biases in global science, with implications for equitable participation and recognition across regions.

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