An exploratory text analysis of the autophagy research field

After its discovery in the 1950 s, the autophagy research field has seen its annual number of publications climb from tens to thousands. The ever-growing number of autophagy publications is a wealth of information but presents a challenge to researchers, especially those new to the field, who are lo...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAutophagy Vol. 18; no. 7; pp. 1648 - 1661
Main Authors Yim, Willa Wen-You, Kurikawa, Yoshitaka, Mizushima, Noboru
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Taylor & Francis 03.07.2022
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Summary:After its discovery in the 1950 s, the autophagy research field has seen its annual number of publications climb from tens to thousands. The ever-growing number of autophagy publications is a wealth of information but presents a challenge to researchers, especially those new to the field, who are looking for a general overview of the field to, for example, determine current topics of the field or formulate new hypotheses. Here, we employed text mining tools to extract research trends in the autophagy field, including those of genes, terms, and topics. The publication trend of the field can be separated into three phases. The exponential rise in publication number began in the last phase and is most likely spurred by a series of highly cited research papers published in previous phases. The exponential increase in papers has resulted in a larger variety of research topics, with the majority involving those that are directly physiologically relevant, such as disease and modulating autophagy. Our findings provide researchers a summary of the history of the autophagy research field and perhaps hints of what is to come. Abbreviations: 5Y-IF: 5-year impact factor; AIS: article influence score; EM: electron microscopy; HGNC: HUGO gene nomenclature committee; LDA: latent Dirichlet allocation; MeSH: medical subject headings; ncRNA: non-coding RNA
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ISSN:1554-8627
1554-8635
1554-8635
DOI:10.1080/15548627.2021.1995151