- Lotka's law
The general formula says::X^n Y = C
or
:Y = C / X^n,
where X is the number of publications, Y the relative frequency of authors with X publications, and n and C are constants depending on the specific field (n approx 2)
This law is believed to have applications in other fields for example in the military for fighter pilot kills.
Example
For 100 authors, who on average each write one article each over a specific period, we have also:
of those making one contribution, i.e. a
power law , where "a" is often nearly 2. It is an empirical observation rather than a necessary result. This form of the law is as originally published and is sometimes referred to as the "discrete Lotka power function".cite journal|author=Egghe, L.|date=2005|title=Relations between the continuous and the discrete Lotka power function|journal=Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology|volume=56|issue=7|pages=664–668|doi=10.1002/asi.20157]References
Further reading
* — Chung and Cox analyze a bibliometric regularity in finance literature, relating Lotka's law to the maxim that "
the rich get richer and the poor get poorer ", and equating it to the maxim that "success breeds success".
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