Abstract

Analyses of faculty citation activity usually focus on counts as a function of author characteristics, such as rank, gender, previous citation levels, and other factors influencing productivity and career path. Citation analyses of publications consider aspects, such as the number of authors, author reputation, author order, length of the title, methodology, and impact factors of the publication. While publication topics or discipline is considered important factors, they are more difficult to analyze, and therefore, performed less frequently. This article attempts to do that for the field of urban planning. Urban planning is multi-disciplinary and includes consideration of social, economic, technological, environmental, and political systems that shape human settlement patterns. It has been suspected that some topics are more “popular” and have larger audiences, therefore, are cited more often. Using nearly 15,000 urban planning publications, this article presents an analysis of topics to assess which are cited most frequently. The classification of publications was performed using a Support Vector Machine (SVM), a machine learning (ML) approach to text classification, using citation data from Google Scholar. The citation levels for the resulting categories are analyzed and discussed.

Highlights

  • Urban planning is an interdisciplinary field, focused on understanding human settlement patterns [1]

  • Using 14,757 publications titles retrieved from 598 Google Scholar Citation profiles, the method

  • The analysis presents a snapshot of scholarship, drawing from nearly 50 years of publications, authored by current urban planning faculty in the USA and Canada, in order to highlight topics receiving the most attention in a number of publication and citation activity

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Summary

Introduction

Urban planning is an interdisciplinary field, focused on understanding human settlement patterns [1]. Urban planning scholars disseminate their research in a wide array of academic journals. The objective of this article is to examine which research topics are of interest to current urban planning faculty in North America, and not a comparison to other disciplines. The analysis concentrates on faculty in urban planning programs and their publication activities, and not what is being published about urban planning topics in general. This provides the opportunity for planning to consider its scholarly priorities as we look to the future of urban planning and urban science research

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