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A boosted-trees method for name disambiguation

  • Jian Wang
  • , Kaspars Berzins
  • , Diana Hicks
  • , Julia Melkers
  • , Fang Xiao
  • , Diogo Pinheiro

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This paper proposes a method for classifying true papers of a set of focal scientists and false papers of homonymous authors in bibliometric research processes. It directly addresses the issue of identifying papers that are not associated ("false") with a given author. The proposed method has four steps: name and affiliation filtering, similarity score construction, author screening, and boosted trees classification. In this methodological paper we calculate error rates for our technique. Therefore, we needed to ascertain the correct attribution of each paper. To do this we constructed a small dataset of 4,253 papers allegedly belonging to a random sample of 100 authors. We apply the boosted trees algorithm to classify papers of authors with total false rate no higher than 30% (i. e. 3,862 papers of 91 authors). A one-run experiment achieves a testing misclassification error 0.55%, testing recall 99.84%, and testing precision 99.60%. A 50-run experiment shows that the median of testing classification error is 0.78% and mean 0.75%. Among the 90 authors in the testing set (one author only appeared in the training set), the algorithm successfully reduces the false rate to zero for 86 authors and misclassifies just one or two papers for each of the remaining four authors.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)391-411
Number of pages21
JournalScientometrics
Volume93
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2012
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Boosted trees
  • Classification tree
  • Common names
  • Name disambiguation

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Social Sciences
  • Computer Science Applications
  • Library and Information Sciences

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