A genomics professor has devised a tongue-in-cheek measure of scientific work vs. scientific recognition.
Neil Hall, a genomics professor with the University of Liverpool, has kicked up a bit of an Internet storm. He's written a paper and has had it published in the journal Genome Biology, suggesting (with tongue firmly in cheek) that some scientists are getting more attention than they deserve, due to their heightened social standing. He's even come up with a way to measure it, his so-called "Kardashian-index" or more simply, K-index-it's derived by noting how many people are following the scientist on Twitter and then dividing that number by followers the scientist probably should have due to papers written and associated citations for it, i.e. proof of actual work done.
The index is named after Kim Kardashian (and her family) of course, who have become famous for being famous -- they don't actually do anything. And that's the point of Hall's paper-is the scientific community in danger of being overrun by scientists who make a lot of noise in the social media world, but do very little actual scientific work? Hall notes that there seems to be times when scientists are asked to give talks at conferences based more on their social standing than on work they have actually done. This begs the question, are scientists (regardless of field) just as susceptible to the cult of celebrity as everyone else and if so, is it harming science?
Full text: http://genomebiology.com/2014/15/7/424
(Score: 3, Interesting) by Joe on Wednesday August 06 2014, @11:43PM
Big names that give talks at conferences often aren't there to present their research (the people under them did the work anyway) - they are there to give a great talk.
Dr. Vincent Racaniello (~6500 followers) is someone who the paper would label as a "Kardashian", but he has that many followers because he participates in a lot of scientific outreach (mainly through his podcast - This Week In Virology http://www.twiv.tv/ [www.twiv.tv]). He is knowledgeable and, through social media, can educate much more of the general public about important scientific issues than if he doubled his scientific publication count.