Top 20 UCSF departments for junior/senior faculty collaboration

Some UCSF departments do a better job of fostering collaboration between junior and senior faculty members. Using UCSF Profiles data, I looked at co-authorship patterns among current faculty at departments across UCSF, to see which departments have the highest rate of junior-senior collaborations. (Caveat: Departments can have different sizes, faculty experience mixes, and field-specific publishing patterns, so comparisons are always imperfect.)

Method

  1. I used UCSF Profiles to identity current UCSF faculty (title includes the words “Professor,” “Dean,” or “Chancellor”) with at least 5 publications, and at least 3 years of publishing experience (i.e. time between the earliest and latest publications). I assigned faculty to departments using their current primary departmental affiliation, and considered only those departments with 20 such faculty members.
  2. In each department, I sorted the faculty by seniority using, in order, title (e.g. “Professor” outranks “Assistant Professor”), number of publications, and length of publishing experience. I then selected the 25% most junior and 25% most senior faculty from each department, and considered every possible junior-senior pair. (So for a department of 40 people, I’d pick out 10 junior, and 10 senior faculty, for a total of 100 junior-senior combinations).
  3. For each of these combinations, I checked if there exists at least one publication where both the junior and senior faculty members are listed as co-authors. For example, if there was a department of 12 faculty members, I’d pick the 3 most junior (A, B, C) and 3 most senior (X, Y, Z); if A and X have been co-authors on 1 publication, and B and Y on 3 publications, then there have been 2 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 9 possible.

The top 20 departments

  1. Urology • 43%
    the 10 most junior and 10 most senior faculty have 43 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 100 possible
  2. Physiological Nursing • 35%
    the 7 most junior and 7 most senior faculty have 17 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 49 possible
  3. Radiation Oncology • 34%
    the 8 most junior and 8 most senior faculty have 22 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 64 possible
  4. Neurological Surgery • 30%
    the 15 most junior and 15 most senior faculty have 67 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 225 possible
  5. Orofacial Sciences • 22%
    the 8 most junior and 8 most senior faculty have 14 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 64 possible
  6. Preventive & Restorative Dental Sciences • 20%
    the 12 most junior and 12 most senior faculty have 29 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 144 possible
  7. Cellular Molecular Pharmacology • 19%
    the 6 most junior and 6 most senior faculty have 7 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 36 possible
  8. Orthopaedic Surgery • 18%
    the 16 most junior and 16 most senior faculty have 46 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 256 possible
  9. Family Community Medicine • 16%
    the 10 most junior and 10 most senior faculty have 16 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 100 possible
  10. Pathology • 15%
    the 16 most junior and 16 most senior faculty have 39 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 256 possible
  11. Family Health Care Nursing • 14%
    the 7 most junior and 7 most senior faculty have 7 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 49 possible
  12. Laboratory Medicine • 14%
    the 13 most junior and 13 most senior faculty have 24 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 169 possible
  13. Cardiovascular Research Institute • 14%
    the 6 most junior and 6 most senior faculty have 5 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 36 possible
  14. Radiology • 13%
    the 35 most junior and 35 most senior faculty have 157 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 1225 possible
  15. Bioengineering • 12%
    the 8 most junior and 8 most senior faculty have 8 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 64 possible
  16. Institute for Health Aging • 12%
    the 8 most junior and 8 most senior faculty have 8 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 64 possible
  17. Otolaryngology • 12%
    the 11 most junior and 11 most senior faculty have 15 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 121 possible
  18. Pharmaceutical Chemistry • 11%
    the 8 most junior and 8 most senior faculty have 7 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 64 possible
  19. Neurology • 10%
    the 42 most junior and 42 most senior faculty have 173 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 1764 possible
  20. Dermatology • 10%
    the 12 most junior and 12 most senior faculty have 14 unique junior/senior co-authorship pairs, of 144 possible

Photo: CTSI at UCSF

UCSF dentistry co-authorships, internal vs. external (by institutions)

What does a typical UCSF publication look like, in terms of the number of internal co-authors vs. the number of external co-authoring institutions? Here’s a breakdown among dentistry-related publications by UCSF researchers published in 2013. (This is the same analysis as yesterday, but looking at the number of external institutions, vs. the number of external people.)

Again, I was surprised to see so many co-authorships between a single UCSF researcher and one or researchers from one or more external institutions (the very top row of results), which accounts for 52% of the papers we looked at.

UCSF vs External Co-Authoring InstitutionsView as PDF Continue reading

UCSF dentistry co-authorships, internal vs. external

What does a typical UCSF publication look like, in terms of internal vs. external co-authors? Here’s a breakdown of each type of co-author, among dentistry-related publications by UCSF researchers published in 2013.

Three immediate take-aways:

  • I was surprised to see so many co-authorships between a single UCSF researcher and one or more external researchers — the very top row of results. By volume, this accounts for 52% of the papers we looked at.
  • When every author is internal to UCSF, there’s an average of 3.5 UCSF co-authors
  • When there’s an external collaboration, there’s an average of 2.0 UCSF co-authors

UCSF vs External Co-AuthorsView as PDF Continue reading

UCSF dentistry collaborations, visualized

Looking at cross-institutional co-authorship networks is a useful way of seeing not only who we work with, but also where there may be gaps of interest.

I first looked at dentistry-related publications by UCSF researchers published in 2013, breaking out the institutions we co-authored with. And there we are, sitting pretty in the center of our universe, collaborating with major institutions in the US, Korea, Australia, Italy, Denmark, and more.

(Details: Institution node sizes indicate the total volume of dentistry-related articles published. Connecting line widths indicate the number of articles co-authored between two institutions. Distance between nodes indicates the tightness of co-authorship networks, and different sets of node colors help distinguish groups of institutions whose researchers frequently co-author together. Of 462 institutions that collaborated with UCSF researchers, we’re showing only 91 that had 10 or more cross-institutional articles in that time.)

View full-size visualization (PDF)

UCSF dentistry research co-authorships, Jan 1 - Dec 5 2013

Then I looked at the total universe of dentistry-related publications published in 2013 (see below). Notice a difference? I have to admit that it took me a while to find UCSF in the mess of dots. (If you look at the full-size view, we’re in the medium blue section, next to the pinks.) Of course this says more about the sheer volume of research being published by universities all over the world, than about any lack of cross-institutionally collaborative spirit on our part; in fact I hid over 80% of the institutions in the first image to keep it readable, which accounts for a a good chunk of the difference. But the sheer weight of institutions from Europe, East Asia, and Latin America in this second image that aren’t there in the first is intriguing, and something I’m going to try digging into.

(Details: Institution node sizes indicate the total volume of dentistry-related articles published. Connecting line widths indicate the number of articles co-authored between two institutions. Distance between nodes indicates the tightness of co-authorship networks, and different sets of node colors help distinguish groups of institutions whose researchers frequently co-author together. Of 2,575 institutions that we found, we’re showing only 374 that had 10 or more cross-institutional articles in that time.)

View full-size visualization (PDF)

Dentistry research co-authorships, Jan 1-Dec 5 2013

(And yes, I realize fully well that I’m probably looking at the wrong things here, privileging increasing the count of cross-institutional collaborations as an end in itself, avoiding any consideration of research quality, and giving greater visual weight to institutions that publish more, regardless of the size of the institution or the quality of work. Pretty pictures lie can hide lots of flaws. I hope you’ll bear with me as I publicly iterate through these topics, step by step, hopefully getting just a little bit less dumb every time.)

Additional uninteresting details: I searched Web of Science for dentistry-related articles published in 2013 (i.e. from January 1-December 5, 2013). I began by running a search for any articles published in 2013 matching a number of dentistry-related keywords (dental, dentistry, electrogalvanism, endodontics, jaw relation record, mouth rehabilitation, odontometry, oral, orthodontics, periodontics, prosthodontics, teeth, tooth), then filtered only those that matched the “DENTISTRY ORAL SURGERY MEDICINE” Web of Science category.

The 100 top researcher keywords at UCSF

I was looking to dig into some examples of collaboration patterns in different research areas, when I realized I didn’t even know the basics — what do UCSF researchers actually research?

UCSF Profiles uses PubMed data to extract MeSH keywords for every publication by every UCSF researcher in the system. We can use this to look at the most commonly used MeSH keywords across every researcher’s body of work. There are lots of caveats here (looking at all publications emphasizes past research interests over current ones; we’re not grouping related obscure MeSH terms with more popular ones; MeSH term assignment practices change over time; and this analysis ignores someone’s role as a first, middle, or last author). But this is certainly a start.

Here’s what I found, using the latest UCSF Profiles data:

  1. 98 researchers have HIV Infections in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  2. 53 researchers have Breast Neoplasms in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  3. 42 researchers have Magnetic Resonance Imaging in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  4. 39 researchers have Tomography, X-Ray Computed in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  5. 39 researchers have Brain Neoplasms in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  6. 37 researchers have Internship and Residency in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  7. 37 researchers have HIV-1 in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  8. 34 researchers have Alzheimer Disease in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  9. 33 researchers have Prostatic Neoplasms in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  10. 32 researchers have Saccharomyces cerevisiae in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  11. 31 researchers have Brain in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  12. 31 researchers have Anti-HIV Agents in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  13. 30 researchers have Neoplasms in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  14. 30 researchers have Smoking in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  15. 29 researchers have Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  16. 29 researchers have Asthma in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  17. 28 researchers have Stroke in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  18. 28 researchers have Sexual Behavior in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  19. 27 researchers have Myocardial Infarction in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  20. 27 researchers have Proteins in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  21. 26 researchers have Neurons in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  22. 26 researchers have Skin Neoplasms in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  23. 26 researchers have Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  24. 25 researchers have Cognition Disorders in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  25. 25 researchers have Homosexuality, Male in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  26. 25 researchers have Emergency Service, Hospital in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  27. 25 researchers have Students, Medical in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  28. 24 researchers have Obesity in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  29. 24 researchers have Glioblastoma in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  30. 23 researchers have Epilepsy in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  31. 23 researchers have Pancreatic Neoplasms in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  32. 23 researchers have Dementia in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  33. 23 researchers have Liver Transplantation in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  34. 23 researchers have Hispanic Americans in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  35. 23 researchers have Education, Medical, Undergraduate in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  36. 22 researchers have Lung in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  37. 22 researchers have Genetic Predisposition to Disease in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  38. 22 researchers have Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  39. 22 researchers have Lung Neoplasms in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  40. 22 researchers have Glioma in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  41. 21 researchers have Drosophila in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  42. 21 researchers have Mass Screening in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  43. 21 researchers have Heart Defects, Congenital in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  44. 21 researchers have Anti-Bacterial Agents in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  45. 21 researchers have Liver in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  46. 21 researchers have Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  47. 21 researchers have Physician-Patient Relations in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  48. 21 researchers have Signal Transduction in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  49. 21 researchers have Primary Health Care in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  50. 21 researchers have Nerve Tissue Proteins in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  51. 21 researchers have Stem Cells in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  52. 21 researchers have Drosophila melanogaster in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  53. 20 researchers have Colorectal Neoplasms in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  54. 20 researchers have Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  55. 20 researchers have Calcium in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  56. 20 researchers have Health Services Accessibility in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  57. 20 researchers have Smoking Cessation in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  58. 20 researchers have Epithelial Cells in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  59. 20 researchers have Wounds and Injuries in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  60. 20 researchers have Drosophila Proteins in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  61. 20 researchers have Models, Molecular in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  62. 19 researchers have Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  63. 19 researchers have MicroRNAs in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  64. 19 researchers have Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Adult in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  65. 19 researchers have Curriculum in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  66. 19 researchers have Aging in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  67. 19 researchers have Embryonic Stem Cells in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  68. 19 researchers have Caenorhabditis elegans in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  69. 19 researchers have Kidney Transplantation in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  70. 18 researchers have Heart Failure in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  71. 18 researchers have Membrane Proteins in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  72. 18 researchers have Asian Americans in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  73. 18 researchers have DNA in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  74. 18 researchers have Tuberculosis in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  75. 18 researchers have Mental Disorders in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  76. 18 researchers have Transcription Factors in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  77. 18 researchers have Coronary Disease in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  78. 18 researchers have Gene Expression Profiling in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  79. 17 researchers have DNA-Binding Proteins in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  80. 17 researchers have CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  81. 17 researchers have Skin Diseases in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  82. 17 researchers have Bacterial Proteins in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  83. 17 researchers have Apoptosis in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  84. 17 researchers have Protein-Serine-Threonine Kinases in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  85. 17 researchers have Homeodomain Proteins in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  86. 17 researchers have Hypertension in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  87. 17 researchers have Stress, Psychological in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  88. 17 researchers have T-Lymphocytes in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  89. 17 researchers have Abortion, Induced in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  90. 17 researchers have Schizophrenia in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  91. 17 researchers have Antineoplastic Agents in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  92. 17 researchers have Proteomics in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  93. 17 researchers have Multiple Sclerosis in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  94. 17 researchers have Teaching in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  95. 17 researchers have Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  96. 17 researchers have Hepatitis C in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  97. 17 researchers have Laparoscopy in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  98. 16 researchers have Muscle, Skeletal in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  99. 16 researchers have Amyloid beta-Peptides in their top 5 MeSH keywords
  100. 16 researchers have Ovarian Neoplasms in their top 5 MeSH keywords

Every researcher at UCSF — by school

Co-authorship networks can help us understand internal research collaboration patterns at UCSF. I used data from UCSF Profiles to create a visualization of (almost) every researcher currently at UCSF, and how their intra-UCSF co-authorship networks break out by school.

Unsurprisingly, the School of Medicine takes up most of the space, and the visualization is probably most interesting in terms of what it might suggest about the smaller schools. Researchers from the Schools of Nursing and Dentistry form their own visible clusters, who often work with each other, but also have co-authorship relationships with researchers at the School of Medicine. But I was surprised by the School of Pharmacy, whose researchers form a main clusters in the bottom right, as well as additional clusters in the middle and top left, due to strong collaborative relationships with School of Medicine researchers.

View full-size visualization (PDF)

Every Researcher at UCSF, by school

Departmental BFFs: Which UCSF departments publish the most often together?

Batman and Robin smoking

Some UCSF departments work more closely together than others. I looked at co-authorship patterns in papers published between January 2012 and November 2013, based on data in UCSF Profiles, and pulled out the UCSF departments that collaborate the most frequently. The results aren’t necessarily surprising. The Department of Medicine is huge, and their cross-departmental collaborations make up 8 of the top 10 collaborations, measured by volume. On the flip side, smaller groups with research areas similar to others make up many of the most common collaborations, by percentage; for example, one-third of papers by researchers primarily affiliated with the Proctor Foundation for Research in Opthalmology are co-authored with researchers from the Department of Opthalmology. I wouldn’t have necessarily guessed, however, connections like that between nursing and psychiatry.

Top UCSF cross-departmental collaborations, by volume

  1. Epidemiology & Biostatistics + Medicine: 365 collaborative papers
  2. Medicine + Pediatrics: 139 collaborative papers
  3. Medicine + Psychiatry: 127 collaborative papers
  4. Neurological Surgery + Neurology: 115 collaborative papers
  5. Medicine + Pathology: 105 collaborative papers
  6. Laboratory Medicine + Medicine: 104 collaborative papers
  7. Medicine + Surgery: 99 collaborative papers
  8. Neurology + Radiology and Biomedical Imaging: 92 collaborative papers
  9. Medicine + Radiology and Biomedical Imaging: 90 collaborative papers
  10. Medicine + Neurology: 86 collaborative papers

Top UCSF cross-departmental collaborations, by percentage

  1. 64.8% of School of Nursing Dean’s Office papers are co-authored with Physiological Nursing
  2. 36.8% of Proctor Foundation papers are co-authored with Ophthalmology
  3. 33.8% of School of Nursing Dean’s Office papers are co-authored with Medicine
  4. 33.3% of Physiological Nursing papers are co-authored with School of Nursing Dean’s Office
  5. 33.3% of Institute for Neurodegenerative Disease papers are co-authored with Neurology
  6. 32.4% of School of Nursing Dean’s Office papers are co-authored with Psychiatry
  7. 29.8% of Physical Therapy & Rehab Sciences papers are co-authored with Radiology and Biomedical Imaging
  8. 27.5% of Physiological Nursing papers are co-authored with Medicine
  9. 25.0% of Epidemiology & Biostatistics papers are co-authored with Medicine
  10. 22.8% of Family & Community Medicine papers are co-authored with Medicine

Details: Data is drawn from UCSF Profiles, and is based on a list of all publications listed on PubMed published between Jan 2012–Nov 2013, focusing on those whose authors include groups of researchers that have primary affiliations to more than one UCSF department. We counted only those publications from researchers with a listed department, and for the purposes of counting top cross-departmental collaborations by percentage, only those collaborations that generated 10 or more papers during the time period. No attempt was made to account for the widely varying sizes and scopes of different departments, the fact that researchers may have multiple departmental affiliations, or the fact that some publications may have been authored before the researchers were affiliated with their current primary departments at UCSF.

Photo: “Glasgow’s own superheroes having a smoke outside the Counting House” by Stephen Fyfe/Flickr, under CC-BY-NC-ND

UCSF’s top 20 most diverse internally-collaborative departments

When UCSF researchers collaborate between departments, how diverse are the collaborations? Here are the top 20 UCSF departments, ranked by the average numbers of UCSF departments their multi-departmental papers include as co-authors (from among the 39 departments whose researchers had a total of 25+ multi-departmental publications published between January 2012 and November 2013).

Details: Data is drawn from UCSF Profiles, and is based on a list of all publications listed on PubMed published between Jan 2012–Nov 2013 whose authors include groups of researchers with primary affiliations to more than one UCSF department. We counted only those publications from researchers with a listed department, and only those departments whose current associated researchers published 25+ publications in conjunction with current members of other UCSF departments between Jan 2012–Nov 2013. No attempt was made to account for the widely varying sizes and scopes of different departments, the fact that researchers may have multiple departmental affiliations, or the fact that some publications may have been authored before the researchers were affiliated with their current primary departments at UCSF. These are the top 20 departments, out of a total of 39 that match our criteria.

  1. Physiological Nursing: co-authors from avg. 2.57 other UCSF departments, among 116 multi-department papers
  2. School of Nursing Dean’s Office: co-authors from avg. 2.44 other UCSF departments, among 52 multi-department papers
  3. Anesthesia/Perioperative Care: co-authors from avg. 1.84 other UCSF departments, among 69 multi-department papers
  4. Physiology: co-authors from avg. 1.83 other UCSF departments, among 29 multi-department papers
  5. Family Health Care Nursing: co-authors from avg. 1.64 other UCSF departments, among 47 multi-department papers
  6. Laboratory Medicine: co-authors from avg. 1.63 other UCSF departments, among 104 multi-department papers
  7. Pharmaceutical Chemistry: co-authors from avg. 1.63 other UCSF departments, among 120 multi-department papers
  8. Pathology: co-authors from avg. 1.62 other UCSF departments, among 234 multi-department papers
  9. Radiation Oncology: co-authors from avg. 1.60 other UCSF departments, among 53 multi-department papers
  10. Microbiology and Immunology: co-authors from avg. 1.57 other UCSF departments, among 49 multi-department papers
  11. Cellular & Molecular Pharmacology: co-authors from avg. 1.57 other UCSF departments, among 74 multi-department papers
  12. Orofacial Sciences: co-authors from avg. 1.57 other UCSF departments, among 53 multi-department papers
  13. HDF Comprehensive Cancer Center: co-authors from avg. 1.55 other UCSF departments, among 31 multi-department papers
  14. Anatomy: co-authors from avg. 1.55 other UCSF departments, among 55 multi-department papers
  15. Pediatrics: co-authors from avg. 1.53 other UCSF departments, among 321 multi-department papers
  16. School of Nursing Community Health Systems: co-authors from avg. 1.52 other UCSF departments, among 31 multi-department papers
  17. Surgery: co-authors from avg. 1.50 other UCSF departments, among 227 multi-department papers
  18. Biochemistry & Biophysics: co-authors from avg. 1.49 other UCSF departments, among 75 multi-department papers
  19. Neurological Surgery: co-authors from avg. 1.47 other UCSF departments, among 393 multi-department papers
  20. Cardiovascular Research Institute: co-authors from avg. 1.45 other UCSF departments, among 53 multi-department papers

UCSF’s top 20 internally collaborative departments

Some UCSF departments consistently reach out out to collaborate with other members of the UCSF community. Here are the top 20 UCSF departments whose researchers have the highest proportion of publications co-authored with members of other UCSF departments from among departments whose researchers had a total of 100+ publications published between January 2012 and November 2013.

Details: Data is drawn from UCSF Profiles, and is based on a list of all publications listed on PubMed published between Jan 2012–Nov 2013 whose authors include groups of researchers with primary affiliations to more than one UCSF department. We counted only publications from researchers with a listed department, and departments with 100+ publications by current associated researchers between Jan 2012–Nov 2013. No attempt was made to account for the widely varying sizes and scopes of different departments, the fact that researchers may have multiple departmental affiliations, or the fact that some publications may have been authored before the researchers were affiliated with their current primary departments at UCSF. These are the top 20 departments, out of a total of 42 that match our criteria.

  1. Epidemiology & Biostatistics: 51.1%
    424 of 829 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  2. Proctor Foundation: 50.3%
    82 of 163 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  3. Pathology: 49.2%
    234 of 476 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  4. Physiological Nursing: 45.5%
    116 of 255 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  5. Neurological Surgery: 43.9%
    393 of 896 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  6. Orofacial Sciences: 42.7%
    53 of 124 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  7. Family Health Care Nursing: 37.0%
    47 of 127 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  8. Clinical Pharmacy: 36.9%
    58 of 157 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  9. Family & Community Medicine: 36.2%
    54 of 149 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  10. Radiology and Biomedical Imaging: 35.0%
    449 of 1284 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  11. Psychiatry: 33.5%
    252 of 753 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  12. Pharmaceutical Chemistry: 33.3%
    120 of 360 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  13. Pediatrics: 32.5%
    321 of 989 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  14. Anatomy: 31.8%
    55 of 173 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  15. Ob/Gyn & Reproductive Sciences: 30.7%
    185 of 602 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  16. Cell & Tissue Biology: 30.5%
    32 of 105 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  17. Dermatology: 30.1%
    129 of 429 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  18. Medicine: 27.7%
    1257 of 4545 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  19. Biochemistry & Biophysics: 26.8%
    75 of 280 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments
  20. Neurology: 26.8%
    400 of 1495 publications co-authored with other UCSF departments