LightGBM models on citation and diversity features predict exogenous diffusion of quantum computing concepts with R² up to 0.78 while endogenous reinforcement remains largely unpredictable after growth controls, with replications in other fields.
Title resolution pending
4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
verdicts
UNVERDICTED 4representative citing papers
A two-stage LightGBM model on 59 features from concept networks forecasts link formation and intensity with ROC-AUC 0.95-0.967 across domains.
PATCH model simulations show preferential attachment and homophily increase segregation and degree inequality while triadic closure reduces segregation but amplifies overall inequality, and the model accounts for observed gender disparities in 50 years of physics and CS collaboration networks.
Early brokerage in academic networks produces cumulative advantage in later participation and career impact for physicists, equally for men and women.
citing papers explorer
-
Forecasting Conceptual Diffusion in Science: The Case of Quantum Computing
LightGBM models on citation and diversity features predict exogenous diffusion of quantum computing concepts with R² up to 0.78 while endogenous reinforcement remains largely unpredictable after growth controls, with replications in other fields.
-
Explainable Forecasting of Scientific Breakthroughs from Concept Network Dynamics
A two-stage LightGBM model on 59 features from concept networks forecasts link formation and intensity with ROC-AUC 0.95-0.967 across domains.
-
Network Inequality through Preferential Attachment, Triadic Closure, and Homophily
PATCH model simulations show preferential attachment and homophily increase segregation and degree inequality while triadic closure reduces segregation but amplifies overall inequality, and the model accounts for observed gender disparities in 50 years of physics and CS collaboration networks.
-
Cumulative Advantage of Brokerage in Academia
Early brokerage in academic networks produces cumulative advantage in later participation and career impact for physicists, equally for men and women.