SICLNov 5, 2025

Beyond Citations: Measuring Idea-level Knowledge Diffusion from Research to Journalism and Policy-making

arXiv:2511.03378v1h-index: 7
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of quantifying knowledge impact for social scientists and stakeholders, though it is incremental in extending diffusion measurement beyond citations.

The study tackled the problem of measuring social science knowledge diffusion beyond citations by using a text-based approach to track idea-level diffusion from research to journalism and policy-making, finding that diffusion patterns vary between ideas, with larger semantic distances between research and policy than research and journalism, and semantic convergence over time for practically oriented ideas.

Despite the importance of social science knowledge for various stakeholders, measuring its diffusion into different domains remains a challenge. This study uses a novel text-based approach to measure the idea-level diffusion of social science knowledge from the research domain to the journalism and policy-making domains. By doing so, we expand the detection of knowledge diffusion beyond the measurements of direct references. Our study focuses on media effects theories as key research ideas in the field of communication science. Using 72,703 documents (2000-2019) from three domains (i.e., research, journalism, and policy-making) that mention these ideas, we count the mentions of these ideas in each domain, estimate their domain-specific contexts, and track and compare differences across domains and over time. Overall, we find that diffusion patterns and dynamics vary considerably between ideas, with some ideas diffusing between other domains, while others do not. Based on the embedding regression approach, we compare contextualized meanings across domains and find that the distances between research and policy are typically larger than between research and journalism. We also find that ideas largely shift roles across domains - from being the theories themselves in research to sense-making in news to applied, administrative use in policy. Over time, we observe semantic convergence mainly for ideas that are practically oriented. Our results characterize the cross-domain diffusion patterns and dynamics of social science knowledge at the idea level, and we discuss the implications for measuring knowledge diffusion beyond citations.

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