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'''Derek DeSolla Price''' (1922-1983) was an English American historian of science.
'''Derek De Solla Price''' (1922-1983) was an English American historian of science.
[[File:DerekdeSollaPrice.jpg|thumb|Derek de Solla Price with a model of the Antikythera mechanism, an ancient Greek model of the solar system.]]
[[File:DerekdeSollaPrice.jpg|thumb|Derek de Solla Price with a model of the Antikythera mechanism, an ancient Greek model of the solar system.]]




==Life==
==Life==
'''Derek John DeSolla Price''' was born on January 22, 1922 in Leyton, a suburb of London. He earned a B.A. with honors in physics and mathematics from the University of London in 1942, then worked on wartime research projects. He received a PhD in experimental physics at the University of London in 1946. In 1948, Price began teaching at Raffles College, which became part of the National University of Singapore. There he read a set of the ''Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society'' and became aware of the evolutionary nature and the historical aspects of science and technology. He also developed his theory of the exponential growth of scientific literature.
'''Derek John De Solla Price''' was born on January 22, 1922 in Leyton, a suburb of London. He earned a B.A. with honors in physics and mathematics from the University of London in 1942, then worked on wartime research projects. Price received a PhD in experimental physics at the University of London in 1946, the went to Pittsburgh and Princeton on a fellowship. In 1948, Price began teaching at Raffles College, which became part of the National University of Singapore. There he read a set of the ''Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society'' and became aware of the evolutionary nature and the historical aspects of science and technology. He also developed his theory of the exponential growth of scientific literature.


Price returned to England and obtained a second doctorate, in the history of science, from Cambridge University in 1954. He worked at Princeton and the Smithsonian Institution before he secured a professorship at Yale University. In 1961 he was named chair of the Department of History of Science and Medicine.  
Price returned to England and obtained a second doctorate, in the history of science, from Cambridge University in 1954. He worked at Princeton and the Smithsonian Institution before he secured a professorship at Yale University. In 1959 he joined the department of history at Yale. In 1960, Price joined the new Department of History of Science and Medicine and soon became chair.  


In the prospectus for the new department, Price elaborated on the exponential growth of scientific literature and tied it to the increased number of indexing and abstracting services. "He also predicted or advanced the notion of relating fields of scholarly activity via interactive communication patterns. He suggested that...relationships within and among disciplinary literatures can be identified and measured via their mode and degree of citation to one another. ...Price was the father (certainly one of the fathers) of what is now known and pursued as bibliometrics." (DALB, Supp.Vol. p.100)
In the prospectus for the new department, Price elaborated on the exponential growth of scientific literature and tied it to the increased number of indexing and abstracting services. Derek Price died in September 1983 in London.
 
In a posthumous, expanded version of Price's 1963 book Little Science, Big Science [titled Little Science, Big Science ... and Beyond (New York: Columbia University Press, 1986), Eugene Garfield and Robert Merton lauded Price: "we can hardly doubt that with this book and the papers which followed it ... Derek John De Solla Price takes his place as the father of Scientometrics." [scientometrics is bibliometrics applied to scientific literature].
 
Derek Price died in September 1983.


==Contributions==
==Contributions==
Price was the founding chair of a new department of the histories of science, technology, and medicine at Yale in 1961.  
In addition to his studies of ancient instruments, Price was as a major promoter of and contributor to the study of quantitative patters in publication (bibliometrics) and science (scientometrics). He had a substantial influence in the popularization of the history of science and technology.
He is generally regarded as a major contributor to bibliometrics, scientometrics, and the popularization of the history of science.


==Publications==  
==Publications==  
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*"Networks of Scientific Papers." ''Science'' 149 (July 30, 1965): 510-515. Reprinted in Kochen, ''The Growth of Knowledge''. Huntington, NY: Wiley, 1967.
*"Networks of Scientific Papers." ''Science'' 149 (July 30, 1965): 510-515. Reprinted in Kochen, ''The Growth of Knowledge''. Huntington, NY: Wiley, 1967.
*''Little Science, Big Science'' NY: Columbia Univ. Press, 1965. New ed. 1986. Lectures on the "science of science."
*''Little Science, Big Science'' NY: Columbia Univ. Press, 1965. New ed. 1986. Lectures on the "science of science."
*"Collaboration in an invisible college." ''American Psychologist'' 21, no. 11 (1966): 1011.
*"Is technology historically independent of science? A study in statistical historiography." ''Technology and Culture'' 6, no. 4 (1965): 553-568.
*"Collaboration in an invisible college." With D. De B. Beaver. ''American Psychologist'' 21, no. 11 (1966): 1011.
*"Gears from the Greeks. The Antikythera mechanism: a calendar computer from ca. 80 BC." ''Transactions of the American Philosophical Society'' (Jan 1, 1974): 1-70.
*"A general theory of bibliometric and other cumulative advantage processes." ''Journal of the American society for Information Science'' 27, no. 5 (1976): 292-306.
*"A general theory of bibliometric and other cumulative advantage processes." ''Journal of the American society for Information Science'' 27, no. 5 (1976): 292-306.


== Awards ==
== Awards ==
*Society for Social Studies of Science. J. D. Bernal Award, 1981.
*Society for Social Studies of Science. J. D. Bernal Award, 1981.
The journal ''Scientometrics'' International Society for Scientometrics and Informetrics confers the Derek John de Solla Price Medal.
*[[ASIST|American Society for Information Science]]. Reserach Award, 1984.
 
*International Society for Scientometrics and Informetrics confers the biennial Derek John de Solla Price Memorial Medal.
== Offices ==


== Further reading ==  
== Further reading ==  

Revision as of 11:29, 9 March 2025

Derek De Solla Price (1922-1983) was an English American historian of science.

Derek de Solla Price with a model of the Antikythera mechanism, an ancient Greek model of the solar system.


Life

Derek John De Solla Price was born on January 22, 1922 in Leyton, a suburb of London. He earned a B.A. with honors in physics and mathematics from the University of London in 1942, then worked on wartime research projects. Price received a PhD in experimental physics at the University of London in 1946, the went to Pittsburgh and Princeton on a fellowship. In 1948, Price began teaching at Raffles College, which became part of the National University of Singapore. There he read a set of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society and became aware of the evolutionary nature and the historical aspects of science and technology. He also developed his theory of the exponential growth of scientific literature.

Price returned to England and obtained a second doctorate, in the history of science, from Cambridge University in 1954. He worked at Princeton and the Smithsonian Institution before he secured a professorship at Yale University. In 1959 he joined the department of history at Yale. In 1960, Price joined the new Department of History of Science and Medicine and soon became chair.

In the prospectus for the new department, Price elaborated on the exponential growth of scientific literature and tied it to the increased number of indexing and abstracting services. Derek Price died in September 1983 in London.

Contributions

In addition to his studies of ancient instruments, Price was as a major promoter of and contributor to the study of quantitative patters in publication (bibliometrics) and science (scientometrics). He had a substantial influence in the popularization of the history of science and technology.

Publications

For a full list his publications and some unpublished papers see the Bibliographic Appendix in Yagi, Badash, & Beaver (1966, 76-83). The Wikipedia lists numerous publications. [1]

  • Heavenly clockwork : the great astronomical clocks of medieval China. With Joseph Needham & Wang Ling. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1960. 2nd ed., 1986.
  • Science since Babylon New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1961. New ed., 1975. A prospectus for the new department at Yale and for his personal goals in the history of science.
  • "Networks of Scientific Papers." Science 149 (July 30, 1965): 510-515. Reprinted in Kochen, The Growth of Knowledge. Huntington, NY: Wiley, 1967.
  • Little Science, Big Science NY: Columbia Univ. Press, 1965. New ed. 1986. Lectures on the "science of science."
  • "Is technology historically independent of science? A study in statistical historiography." Technology and Culture 6, no. 4 (1965): 553-568.
  • "Collaboration in an invisible college." With D. De B. Beaver. American Psychologist 21, no. 11 (1966): 1011.
  • "Gears from the Greeks. The Antikythera mechanism: a calendar computer from ca. 80 BC." Transactions of the American Philosophical Society (Jan 1, 1974): 1-70.
  • "A general theory of bibliometric and other cumulative advantage processes." Journal of the American society for Information Science 27, no. 5 (1976): 292-306.

Awards

  • Society for Social Studies of Science. J. D. Bernal Award, 1981.
  • American Society for Information Science. Reserach Award, 1984.
  • International Society for Scientometrics and Informetrics confers the biennial Derek John de Solla Price Memorial Medal.

Further reading

  • Herner, Saul. "Price, Derek de Solla (1922-1983)." Supplement to the Dictionary of American library biography, ed. by Wayne A. Wiegand. Littleton, CO: Libraries Unlimited, 1990, pp 98-101.
  • Yagi, Eri, Lawrence Badash, & Donald de B. Beaver. "Derek J. de S. Price (1922–83) Historian of science and herald of scientometrics." Interdisciplinary Science Reviews 21, Issue 1 (March 1996): 1-88. [2]

Papers

  • Price's library and papers were deposited at the Musée National des Sciences, des Techniques, et des Industries, Paris, France.
  • Adler Planetarium, Chicago, IL. Derek J. de Solla Price Papers. [3]