Abstract

Interdisciplinary research increasingly fuels innovation, and is a key input for future breakthroughs. Yet the timing of when interdisciplinary research achieves its highest citation impact remains unclear. Here, we use the time of a paper to reach its citation peak to quantify citation dynamics, and examine its relationship with paper interdisciplinarity. Using large scale publication datasets spanning over 37 years, our results suggest that interdisciplinary papers show significant delayed citation impact both at the individual paper level and collectively, as it takes longer for highly interdisciplinary papers to reach their citation peak as well as their half citations. Such relationships are nearly universal across various scientific disciplines and time periods. Furthermore, we study the underlying forces behind this delayed impact, finding that the effect goes beyond the Matthew effect (i.e., the rich-get-richer effect). Although team size and content conventionality are partly related to the citation delay, they cannot fully explain this effect. Overall, our results suggest that governments, research administrators, and funding agencies should be aware of this general feature of interdisciplinary science, which may have broad policy implications.

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