Abstract
Data were compiled and linearly correlated on the growth in the gross domestic product (GDP) with the academic chemical engineering literature over a recent 26-year period for five different English-speaking countries, namely, the United States, Canada, Great Britain, India and Australia. The publication figures were also scaled to the total number of chemical engineering schools in the country; furthermore, all of these data were normalized from zero to unity, using the figures for the most recent year (1996) as the denominators, and then correlated against each other in linear fashion. Resulting confidence levels were in excess of 99% for each of the individual five countries, as well as for the entire set of normalized data for all of the countries.
Article PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Avoid common mistakes on your manuscript.
References
Institute for Scientific Information,Science Citation Index (Corporate Index), Philadelphia, PA, published annually.
G. Petry, J. Suttle, A comprehensive analysis of worldwide scholarly productivity in selected US business journals,Quart. Rev. Econ. Bus., 28, No. 3 (1988) 88–104.
M. J. Stahl, T. L. Leap, Z. Z. Wei, Publication in leading management journals as a measure of institutional research productivity,Acad. Mgmt. J., 31 (1988) 707–720.
M. H. Rothkopf, Editorial: Which universities contribute to the practical literature? The secondInterfaces ranking,Interfaces, 27, No. 4 (1997) 19–22.
J. T. Sommerfeld, Research rankings from literature publications,Intl. J. Appl. Engrg. Educn., 5 (1989) 593–600.
J. T. Sommerfeld, Trends in research rankings of American chemical engineering schools,Intl. J. Appl. Engrg. Educn., 7 (1991) 158–160.
G. F. Bennett, J. T. Sommerfeld, Research rankings of Canadian chemical engineering schools by literature publications,Canad. Chem. News, 47, No. 7 (1995) 29–31.
M. J. Realff, J. T. Sommerfeld, Research rankings of British chemical engineering schools by literature publications,The Chem. Engr., No. 589 (May 25, 1995), 17–18.
Rankings of research-doctorate programs in 41 disciplines at 274 institutions,The Chronicle of Higher Educn., 42, No. 4 (September 22, 1995), A21–A33.
J. Gourman,The Gourman Report: A Rating of Graduate and Professional Programs in American & International Universities, (3rd ed.), Natl. Education Standards, Los Angeles, 1985.
America's Best Graduate Schools,U. S. News & World Report, 124, No. 8 (March 2, 1998), 66–98.
M. Johnson, C. E. Hamrin, The impact of chemical engineering research,Chem. Engrg. Educn., 28 (1994) 290–294.
H. P. F. Peters, A. F. J. Van Raan, On determinants of citation scores: A case study in chemical engineering,J. Amer. Soc. Information Sci., 45, No. 1 (1994) 39–49.
H. P. F. Peters, D. Hartmann, A. F. J. Van Raan, Monitoring advances in chemical engineering, inInformetrics 87/88, L. Egghe and R. Rousseau, eds., Elsevier Science Publishers, Amsterdam (1988), 175–195.
H. P. F. Peters, A. F. J. Van Raan, Co-word-based science maps of chemical engineering. Part I: Representations by direct multidimensional scaling,Research Policy, 22 (1993), 23–45.
S. Rousseau, R. Rousseau, Data envelopment analysis as a tool for constructing scientometric indicators,Scientometrics, 40 (1997), 45–56.
W. H. McNeese, R. A. Klein,Statistical Methods for the Process Industries, Marcel Dekker, Inc., New York, 1991.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Hart, P.W., Sommerfeld, J.T. Relationship between growth in gross domestic product (GDP) and growth in the chemical engineering literature in five different countries. Scientometrics 42, 299–311 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02458373
Received:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02458373