Report summary
For Boston University Department of Biochemistry in 2018-2020, the graph shows 25 visible PIs and 14 internal PI collaborations. The dominant subject mix is Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology as the leading field (44% of slots across 20 PIs; 20 labels), Molecular Biology as the leading subfield (25% of slots across 15 PIs; 15 labels), and Adipose Tissue and Metabolism as the leading topic (5% of slots across 4 PIs; 4 labels). The network looks reasonably well-rounded, with visible collaboration groups but not so much concentration that one field explains the whole department. The top weighted PIs are Joseph Zaia (17.4 weighted works; Glycosylation and Glycoproteins Research, Advanced Proteomics Techniques and Applications). The most visible ties are Joseph Zaia and Cheng Lin (6 shared works, weight 3.3); Catherine E. Costello and Cheng Lin (6 shared works, weight 2.9). The standout breakdown groups are group 1 with 6 PIs, 5 internal connections, weight 2.3, around Molecular Biology, Cell Biology, Epidemiology, led by Mikel Garcia‐Marcos, Stephen R. Farmer, Xaralabos Varelas.
