Bibliometric Analysis on the Distributed Decision, Decentralized Decision, and Fuzzy Logic

This study aims to survey the bibliometric properties of distributed decisions, decentralized decisions, and fuzzy articles published between 1995 and 2023 in the Web of Science (WoS) database. During the analysis process, the keywords “distributed decision, decentralized decision, and fuzzy” were s...

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Main Authors: Nihan Çağlayan, Sina Abbasi, İbrahim Yilmaz, Babek Erdebilli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024-01-01
Series:Discrete Dynamics in Nature and Society
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2024/7305880
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author Nihan Çağlayan
Sina Abbasi
İbrahim Yilmaz
Babek Erdebilli
author_facet Nihan Çağlayan
Sina Abbasi
İbrahim Yilmaz
Babek Erdebilli
author_sort Nihan Çağlayan
collection DOAJ
description This study aims to survey the bibliometric properties of distributed decisions, decentralized decisions, and fuzzy articles published between 1995 and 2023 in the Web of Science (WoS) database. During the analysis process, the keywords “distributed decision, decentralized decision, and fuzzy” were scanned in all languages, both in the titles and the content of all publication types. As a result of the analysis, 79 articles in all fields comprised the dataset. The most used keywords in the articles were related to the distributed decision, decentralized decision, and fuzzy logic, and the most frequently cited publications were examined using the social network analysis method, which uses VOSviewer (version 1.6.19) to visualize the relationships. The study’s goal on “active researchers, active journals, journal metrics, title document type, active countries, and active institutions” was to look at the words most frequently used in articles on distributed, decentralized, and fuzzy logic. The social network analysis represented the relationships between these keywords and the most frequently cited publications. The findings demonstrated a significant correlation between using these keywords in academic literature and their contribution to this field’s research. These results can assist researchers in finding potential partners and keeping up with current research trends. Overall, this study offers important new perspectives on the state of research on fuzzy logic, distributed decision making, and decentralized decision making.
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spelling doaj-art-ebe96f8ed7d64c95afebe4533136cf8d2025-08-20T03:21:18ZengWileyDiscrete Dynamics in Nature and Society1607-887X2024-01-01202410.1155/2024/7305880Bibliometric Analysis on the Distributed Decision, Decentralized Decision, and Fuzzy LogicNihan Çağlayan0Sina Abbasi1İbrahim Yilmaz2Babek Erdebilli3Department of Mechanical EngineeringDepartment of Industrial EngineeringDepartment of Industrial EngineeringDepartment of Industrial EngineeringThis study aims to survey the bibliometric properties of distributed decisions, decentralized decisions, and fuzzy articles published between 1995 and 2023 in the Web of Science (WoS) database. During the analysis process, the keywords “distributed decision, decentralized decision, and fuzzy” were scanned in all languages, both in the titles and the content of all publication types. As a result of the analysis, 79 articles in all fields comprised the dataset. The most used keywords in the articles were related to the distributed decision, decentralized decision, and fuzzy logic, and the most frequently cited publications were examined using the social network analysis method, which uses VOSviewer (version 1.6.19) to visualize the relationships. The study’s goal on “active researchers, active journals, journal metrics, title document type, active countries, and active institutions” was to look at the words most frequently used in articles on distributed, decentralized, and fuzzy logic. The social network analysis represented the relationships between these keywords and the most frequently cited publications. The findings demonstrated a significant correlation between using these keywords in academic literature and their contribution to this field’s research. These results can assist researchers in finding potential partners and keeping up with current research trends. Overall, this study offers important new perspectives on the state of research on fuzzy logic, distributed decision making, and decentralized decision making.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2024/7305880
spellingShingle Nihan Çağlayan
Sina Abbasi
İbrahim Yilmaz
Babek Erdebilli
Bibliometric Analysis on the Distributed Decision, Decentralized Decision, and Fuzzy Logic
Discrete Dynamics in Nature and Society
title Bibliometric Analysis on the Distributed Decision, Decentralized Decision, and Fuzzy Logic
title_full Bibliometric Analysis on the Distributed Decision, Decentralized Decision, and Fuzzy Logic
title_fullStr Bibliometric Analysis on the Distributed Decision, Decentralized Decision, and Fuzzy Logic
title_full_unstemmed Bibliometric Analysis on the Distributed Decision, Decentralized Decision, and Fuzzy Logic
title_short Bibliometric Analysis on the Distributed Decision, Decentralized Decision, and Fuzzy Logic
title_sort bibliometric analysis on the distributed decision decentralized decision and fuzzy logic
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2024/7305880
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AT sinaabbasi bibliometricanalysisonthedistributeddecisiondecentralizeddecisionandfuzzylogic
AT ibrahimyilmaz bibliometricanalysisonthedistributeddecisiondecentralizeddecisionandfuzzylogic
AT babekerdebilli bibliometricanalysisonthedistributeddecisiondecentralizeddecisionandfuzzylogic