Disruptiveness index
Also known as: D index, Disruption index, CD index
A bibliometric measure that quantifies the degree to which a scientific paper disrupts or consolidates existing knowledge. Calculated from citation patterns, it ranges from -1 (fully consolidating, where subsequent papers always cite both the focal paper and its references) to 1 (fully disruptive, where subsequent papers cite only the focal paper and not its references). A higher score indicates that future work treats the paper as a standalone contribution rather than as an extension of prior work. Research has shown that disruptiveness across science has been declining over time, with HCI declining faster than the global average.
Category: Research Methodology · research methodology · bibliometric analysis
Related: Bibliometric analysis