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- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!ames!agate!dog.ee.lbl.gov!csa3.lbl.gov!sichase
- From: sichase@csa3.lbl.gov (SCOTT I CHASE)
- Newsgroups: sci.physics
- Subject: Re: Top 10 Cited References in the 80's
- Date: 23 Nov 1992 12:06 PST
- Organization: Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory - Berkeley, CA, USA
- Lines: 33
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <23NOV199212062436@csa3.lbl.gov>
- References: <1992Nov18.193350.7926@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> <Nov.19.15.43.08.1992.6763@ruhets.rutgers.edu> <1340@kepler1.rentec.com> <Nov.22.20.37.14.1992.16349@ruhets.rutgers.edu>
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- In article <Nov.22.20.37.14.1992.16349@ruhets.rutgers.edu>, bweiner@ruhets.rutgers.edu (Benjamin Weiner) writes...
- >andrew@rentec.com (Andrew Mullhaupt) writes:
- >>Here's my suggestion: Publish an incorrect [top 10 cited] list. Everyone who complains
- >>gets his tenure (or equivalent) revoked. Next suggestion: Physics should
- >>order authors alphabetically. Final suggestion: all journals drop little
- >>biographies and pictures of authors, and authors use initials instead
- >>of names.
- >
- >I like the first one!! But the next is bad, you'd just have people refusing
- >to work with anyone who came ahead in the alphabet.
-
- Unfortunately, human behavior being what it is, this is a non-trivial
- problem. For example, when I think of physics papers that I have read, I
- can often only remember (or remember best), the first author. For example,
- I know the name F. Abe (from the CDF collaboration), S. Ahlens, A. Bamberger,
- R. Albrecht, and a host of other A,B, and C's, and I identify them with
- their experiments. Some of these names (not the ones listed) are only
- graduate students, but happen to be first in the alphabetical ordering
- of their collaboration lists.
-
- So there is some cause for for complaint on the part of the W, X, Y and
- Z's of the world. (With the exception of A. Zee, whose name is impossible
- to forget.) Unfortunately, I know of no equitable solution to the
- problem. Random ordering of names from paper to paper would only create
- confusion, and no other system guarantees fairness.
-
- -Scott
- --------------------
- Scott I. Chase "It is not a simple life to be a single cell,
- SICHASE@CSA2.LBL.GOV although I have no right to say so, having
- been a single cell so long ago myself that I
- have no memory at all of that stage of my
- life." - Lewis Thomas
-