TY - JOUR
T1 - How lonely or influential is the Lone Wolf? An analysis of individual scholars’ solo-authorship dynamics
AU - Lazebnik, Teddy
AU - Rosenfeld, Ariel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/5
Y1 - 2025/5
N2 - Collaboration has become a defining feature of modern science. Nevertheless, solo-authorship has not disappeared entirely. In this study, we investigate solo-authorship dynamics at the individual scholar level, a perspective often overlooked in favor of publication-level analyses, focusing on the propensity of scholars to solo-publish over their careers and this propensity’s potential relation to their academic influence. Using a dataset of 7238 scholars from Biology, Computer Science, Psychology, and Philosophy, we analyze the temporal solo-authorship patterns through heatmap analysis, time series clustering, and statistical testing. By formally defining and analyzing the notion of the academic “Lone Wolf”—a scholar who persistently solo-publishes at a high rate—we show that a global definition of a Lone Wolf may seem unreasonable. Nevertheless, we identify three characteristic solo-authorship trajectories across the four disciplines that share several commonalities and highly their differences. Our findings do not suggest any significant relation between scholars’ solo- authorship dynamics and their influence metrics.
AB - Collaboration has become a defining feature of modern science. Nevertheless, solo-authorship has not disappeared entirely. In this study, we investigate solo-authorship dynamics at the individual scholar level, a perspective often overlooked in favor of publication-level analyses, focusing on the propensity of scholars to solo-publish over their careers and this propensity’s potential relation to their academic influence. Using a dataset of 7238 scholars from Biology, Computer Science, Psychology, and Philosophy, we analyze the temporal solo-authorship patterns through heatmap analysis, time series clustering, and statistical testing. By formally defining and analyzing the notion of the academic “Lone Wolf”—a scholar who persistently solo-publishes at a high rate—we show that a global definition of a Lone Wolf may seem unreasonable. Nevertheless, we identify three characteristic solo-authorship trajectories across the four disciplines that share several commonalities and highly their differences. Our findings do not suggest any significant relation between scholars’ solo- authorship dynamics and their influence metrics.
KW - Scientific communication
KW - Solo authorship
KW - Solo publishing
KW - Temporal analysis
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105004361644&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11192-025-05332-z
DO - 10.1007/s11192-025-05332-z
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AN - SCOPUS:105004361644
SN - 0138-9130
VL - 130
SP - 3053
EP - 3069
JO - Scientometrics
JF - Scientometrics
IS - 5
M1 - e0225837
ER -