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Data visualisations

Patterns in the literature, made visible. Choose a tool below to explore publication trends, citation structure, intellectual communities, and collaborative networks across the field.

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This graph maps collaborative relationships among the most-published authors in Pinakes. Each circle represents an author — its size reflects their total article count in the index. Lines connect authors who have co-authored at least one article together; thicker lines mean more shared publications.

Rhetoric and composition is historically a solo-author field, so most scholars don't appear here: they either have fewer indexed publications than the threshold you've set, or they haven't co-authored with others in the index. The authors who do appear — and especially the clusters that form around them — tend to reflect sustained research communities: writing center scholars, WAC researchers, technical communication groups, empirical writing researchers. Isolates (nodes with no edges) are frequent publishers who work primarily alone.

How to use it: Scroll or pinch to zoom · Drag nodes to rearrange · Click a node to highlight that author's connections; click again or use the "View profile" button to open their full page · Use the controls below to change which authors appear.

Methodology

Data source

Author names are extracted from CrossRef metadata for each article. Co-authorship is inferred from shared bylines: if two authors appear on the same article, they share a co-authorship edge. Author names are normalized (case-folded, whitespace-trimmed) but not disambiguated — two authors with the same name are treated as one person, and the same author with variant name forms (e.g., with or without middle initial) may appear as separate nodes.

Graph construction

The visualization displays an undirected, weighted graph where each node is an author and each edge connects two authors who have co-authored at least one indexed article. Edge weight equals the number of co-authored articles. The node set is filtered to authors with at least n indexed publications (configurable via the “Min. publications” dropdown), then capped at the top k by total publication count. Only edges between nodes in the displayed set are shown.

Layout algorithm

The graph uses a force-directed layout (d3-force) where nodes repel each other via simulated charge and edges act as springs pulling co-authors together. Stronger co-authorship ties (more shared papers) produce shorter, thicker edges. The simulation iterates until it reaches a visually stable configuration, causing research communities to form visible clusters.

Interpretation and limitations

Clusters in the graph reflect collaborative communities within the indexed journals. However, the network reflects only publications within this index: scholars who collaborate extensively in books, edited collections, or journals not indexed here will appear less connected than their actual collaborative record warrants. Solo-authored work — still the dominant mode in rhetoric and composition — is invisible in this graph. Prolific solo authors appear as isolates (unconnected nodes), which is an accurate representation of their collaborative profile within the index but not necessarily of their broader influence.

Author name disambiguation remains an unsolved problem in bibliometrics. Common names may inflate connectivity, while name variants for the same author may understate it.

The Author Network shows collaborative relationships (co-authorship). For the field’s perceived intellectual relationships — which scholars are cited together regardless of whether they have collaborated — see Author Co-Citation.

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