Bilateral and multilateral international scientific collaboration of EU member states: OpenAlex vs Scopus (2000-2024)
Pith reviewed 2026-06-27 22:27 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
OpenAlex restricted to cited articles yields EU collaboration metrics comparable to Scopus from 2000 to 2024.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
When OpenAlex is restricted to cited articles, its measurements of bilateral and multilateral research collaboration among EU member states and with global partners align closely with those from Scopus over 2000-2024. Relative Intensity of Collaboration is higher for multilateral partnerships. EU framework programs appear to have boosted collaboration, though asymmetries remain between EU-14 and EU-13 countries, with specific patterns in partnerships with countries like Russia, China, and the US.
What carries the argument
Relative Intensity of Collaboration (RIC), which measures observed versus expected collaboration based on publication shares, used to compare bilateral and multilateral country pairs across the two databases.
Load-bearing premise
That restricting OpenAlex to cited articles is sufficient to align its coverage, quality, and collaboration signals with Scopus without introducing systematic biases in country-level metrics.
What would settle it
A side-by-side calculation showing that country-level RIC values or collaboration trends diverge substantially between OpenAlex (cited subset) and Scopus for the same EU country pairs.
Figures
read the original abstract
This study examines the evolution of bilateral and multilateral scientific collaboration among EU Member States and between the EU and global partners from 2000 to 2024 using data from OpenAlex and Scopus. The results show that OpenAlex, when restricted to cited articles, yields findings broadly comparable to those obtained from Scopus for assessing country-level research collaboration. Relative Intensity of Collaboration (RIC) values are consistently higher for multilateral than for bilateral partnerships. Increased collaboration intensity during the final years of FP7, the intermediate and later stages of Horizon 2020, and the final years of the study period suggests that EU FP may have strengthened collaboration among participating countries. With regard to European integration, multilateral collaboration intensity increased between the EU-14 and EU-13, between these groups and EU candidate countries, and within the EU-13. Despite this growth, structural asymmetries persist. Bilateral collaboration among EU-14 countries is concentrated within the group and with EU-13, Brazil, Norway, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom, whereas EU-13 countries collaborate more intensively within the group, with EU candidate countries and Russia. EU-14 countries maintain stronger multilateral collaboration with high-income countries such as Australia, Canada, and the United States than do EU-13 countries. For both groups, collaboration with China remains the weakest. Although multilateral collaboration intensity with Russia has declined, it remained above the expected level for the EU-14 in 2024 and was 2.5 times higher than expected for the EU-13. This persistence may reflect the continued participation of Russian researchers in multilateral projects despite Russia's suspension from Horizon Europe in 2022.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper compares bilateral and multilateral scientific collaboration among EU member states and with global partners from 2000-2024 using OpenAlex and Scopus data. It claims that restricting OpenAlex to cited articles produces broadly comparable country-level results to Scopus on metrics such as Relative Intensity of Collaboration (RIC), with multilateral RIC consistently higher than bilateral; it also reports increased collaboration intensity linked to EU framework programs, growth in multilateral ties between EU-14/EU-13 groups, and persistent structural asymmetries (e.g., EU-14 stronger with high-income countries, EU-13 with candidates and Russia).
Significance. If the comparability claim is substantiated with transparent methods and quantitative validation, the work would support OpenAlex as a viable open-access alternative to Scopus for collaboration studies, which is practically significant given subscription costs and coverage differences. The policy-relevant findings on EU integration effects and post-2022 Russia collaboration patterns add value to science-policy analysis.
major comments (3)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the central claim that OpenAlex 'when restricted to cited articles, yields findings broadly comparable' to Scopus is asserted without any reported statistical tests, agreement metrics (e.g., correlation or rank correlation on RIC values), or quantitative thresholds for 'broadly comparable'.
- [Methods] Methods: no description is supplied of the citation-filtering procedure (citation window, minimum citation count, handling of self-citations or database-specific citation counts), data exclusion rules, or how country-level aggregates were computed and aligned between the two sources.
- [Results] Results: reported RIC patterns and subgroup asymmetries lack error estimates, sensitivity checks, or direct side-by-side tables quantifying divergence between the filtered OpenAlex and Scopus outputs, making it impossible to evaluate whether observed similarities are robust or coincidental.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: 'final years of the study period' is vague; specify the exact years or reference the relevant figure/table.
- [Throughout] Throughout: define RIC, FP7, Horizon 2020, EU-14, and EU-13 on first use even if conventional in the field.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive and detailed comments. The feedback identifies important gaps in quantitative validation, methodological transparency, and robustness checks that we agree require attention. We respond to each major comment below and will incorporate the suggested improvements in the revised manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the central claim that OpenAlex 'when restricted to cited articles, yields findings broadly comparable' to Scopus is asserted without any reported statistical tests, agreement metrics (e.g., correlation or rank correlation on RIC values), or quantitative thresholds for 'broadly comparable'.
Authors: We accept the criticism. The claim of broad comparability will be supported in the revision by adding Pearson and Spearman rank correlations between RIC values from the two sources, together with an explicit quantitative threshold (e.g., correlations exceeding 0.75) used to define 'broadly comparable'. These metrics will be reported in both the abstract and the results section. revision: yes
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Referee: [Methods] Methods: no description is supplied of the citation-filtering procedure (citation window, minimum citation count, handling of self-citations or database-specific citation counts), data exclusion rules, or how country-level aggregates were computed and aligned between the two sources.
Authors: We agree that these procedural details are necessary for reproducibility. The revised methods section will explicitly describe the citation window applied, any minimum citation thresholds, treatment of self-citations, database-specific citation handling, data exclusion criteria, and the exact steps used to compute and align country-level aggregates across OpenAlex and Scopus. revision: yes
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Referee: [Results] Results: reported RIC patterns and subgroup asymmetries lack error estimates, sensitivity checks, or direct side-by-side tables quantifying divergence between the filtered OpenAlex and Scopus outputs, making it impossible to evaluate whether observed similarities are robust or coincidental.
Authors: This observation is correct. In the revision we will add bootstrap-derived confidence intervals to the RIC estimates, perform sensitivity analyses varying the citation filter parameters, and insert side-by-side tables that directly quantify absolute and relative differences between the filtered OpenAlex and Scopus outputs for the main collaboration metrics. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity; empirical database comparison
full rationale
The paper conducts a direct empirical comparison of collaboration metrics (RIC, bilateral/multilateral patterns) between two independent external databases, OpenAlex (with cited-article filter) and Scopus. No equations, fitted parameters renamed as predictions, self-citations as load-bearing premises, or definitional equivalences appear in the abstract or described methods. The restriction to cited articles is presented as an alignment step rather than a constructed equivalence, and all reported patterns derive from external data sources without internal reduction to inputs.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- domain assumption Cited articles in OpenAlex form a subset whose collaboration signals align with full Scopus records for country-level analysis
- domain assumption Relative Intensity of Collaboration (RIC) accurately captures deviation from expected partnership levels
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2004
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