Using Manual and Computer-Based Text-Mining to Uncover Research Trends for Apis mellifera

UNCG Author/Contributor (non-UNCG co-authors, if there are any, appear on document)
Esmaeil Amiri, Postdoctoral Fellow (Creator)
Prashanti Manda, Assistant Professor (Creator)
Olav Rueppell, Associate Professor (Creator)
Prashant Waiker (Creator)
Institution
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro (UNCG )
Web Site: http://library.uncg.edu/

Abstract: Honey bee research is believed to be influenced dramatically by colony collapse disorder (CCD) and the sequenced genome release in 2006, but this assertion has never been tested. By employing text-mining approaches, research trends were tested by analyzing over 14,000 publications during the period of 1957 to 2017. Quantitatively, the data revealed an exponential growth until 2010 when the number of articles published per year ceased following the trend. Analysis of author-assigned keywords revealed that changes in keywords occurred roughly every decade with the most fundamental change in 1991–1992, instead of 2006. This change might be due to several factors including the research intensification on the Varroa mite. The genome release and CCD had quantitively only minor effects, mainly on honey bee health-related topics post-2006. Further analysis revealed that computational topic modeling can provide potentially hidden information and connections between some topics that might be ignored in author-assigned keywords.

Additional Information

Publication
Veterinary Sciences, 7(2), 61
Language: English
Date: 2020
Keywords
text-mining, topic modeling, colony collapse disorder, genomics, Varroa mite, honey bee health, Apis mellifera

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