Thomson Reuters Names the World's 'Hottest'
Researchers
PHILADELPHIA and LONDON/PRNewswire/ -- The world's
"hottest" researcher is biochemist Rudolf Jaenisch from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is joined by scientists
scattered from Ann Arbor to Osaka on the annual Thomson Reuters list of
the world's 12 hottest researchers.
In its March/April issue of Science Watch, Thomson Reuters identified
the dozen authors whose recent papers were cited most often by other
researchers during 2009. Jaenisch authored 14 of these Hot Papers. His
research investigates reprogrammed fibroblast cells in models of
Parkinson's disease, sickle-cell anemia and other conditions.
Mark J. Daly from the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard produced 13
Hot Papers on genetic mapping and genome-wide association studies.
Several of these reports were co-authored with David Altshuler and Paul
I.W. de Bakker from the Broad Institute and Goncalo Abecasis of the
University of Michigan -- all of whom are making their first appearance
in the annual Top 12 list.
The Broad Institute has a fourth researcher on the list: genomics
researcher Eric S. Lander.
Two materials professors from Manchester University in England earned
spots in the Top 12: Andre K. Geim and Konstantin Novoselov.
Shizuo Akira of Osaka University, named by Thomson Reuters as the
hottest researcher in 2005 and 2006, returned to the list this year with
nine Hot Papers exploring toll-like receptors and aspects of innate
immunity.
Rounding out the list are Carlo M. Croce from Ohio State University,
Mikhail Katsnelson from Radboud University in Nijmegen, Netherlands, and
Ji-Huan He from Donghua University in Shanghai, China.
"Our annual roundup of researchers who have authored multiple Hot
Papers allows us to recognize those who are leading scientific thought,"
said Christopher King, editor of Science Watch. "It is exciting to see
several researchers make first-time appearances on the list."
Thomson Reuters Hot Papers are derived from its Web of Science(SM)
database. A published work is identified as a Hot Paper if it is less
than two years old and has achieved a rate of citations in scientific
journals that is markedly higher than papers of comparable type and age.
The researchers named have published the most Hot Papers in the latest
two-year period indexed by Thomson Reuters for inclusion in Web of
Science.
For a detailed list of the 2008-2009 hottest researchers and research
papers, as well as expert analysis, visit ScienceWatch.com.
Here's the full list:
Name Institution Field Number
of Hot
Papers
Rudolf Jaenisch Whitehead Institute at Biochemistry 14
MIT
Mark J. Daly Broad Institute of MIT Genetics 13
and Harvard
Andre K. Geim University of Manchester Materials 13
David Altshuler Broad Institute of MIT Genetics 13
and Harvard
Konstantin Novoselov University of Manchester Materials 12
Carlo M. Croce Ohio State University Cancer Genetics 12
Goncalo Abecasis University of Michigan Biostatistics 10
Eric S. Lander Broad Institute of MIT Genomics 10
and Harvard
Mikhail Katsnelson Radboud University of Materials 10
Nijmegen
Ji-Huan He Donghua University Mathematics 10
Paul I.W. de Bakker Broad Institute of MIT Genetics 9
and Harvard
Shizuo Akira Osaka University Immunology 9
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Source: Thomson Reuters
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