Quantification and Multiple Authorships in Political Science

POLITICAL SCIENCE IS BEGINNING to develop a corpus of self-study literature that has produced accounts of, for example, productivity rates of political scientists and their departments, the status of women in the discipline, and evaluations of professional journals.' These introspective studies complement historical assessments of the discipline and thus facilitate a more precise monitoring of the

[1]  D. Price,et al.  Collaboration in an invisible college. , 1966, The American psychologist.

[2]  R. Merton The Matthew Effect in Science , 1968, Science.