Bibliometrics
On this page we present the results of the small-scale study executed by Wolfgang Reinhardt. The word clouds that we presented on the program pages also stem from this study. If you are interested in the results, method and goals of the small-scale study, get in touch with Wolfgang on Twitter or via mail.
Bibliographic coupling network
Bibliographic coupling occurs when two works reference a common third work in their bibliographies. The coupling strength is higher the more citations the two bodies have in common, and this coupling is used to extrapolate how similar the subject matter of the two works is. Source: Wikipedia


For day 2 we could not generate a bibliographic network as the papers from day2 do not share common references
Co-citation network
Two papers are said to be co-cited if they appear simultaneously in a third paper's reference section.
You can also explore the co-citation network in an interactive graph explorer. Start here (Flash required)

Co-authorship network
Co-authorships arise from the fact that two people have written a paper together. Authors of multiple papers have more connections and appear larger in the network.
You can also explore the co-authorship network in an interactive graph explorer. Start here (Flash required)
