TY - JOUR
T1 - Global Trends in Tai Chi Research
T2 - A Bibliometric Analysis
AU - Huang, Tzu Yu
AU - Hsieh, Wei Li
AU - Cheng, Kai Yuan
AU - Brazaitis, Marius
AU - Hung, Chen Sin
AU - Li, Ruei Hong
AU - Kao, Shih Chun
AU - Tran, Ngoc Thi Bich
AU - Chang, Yu Kai
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 by the authors.
PY - 2026/1
Y1 - 2026/1
N2 - Tai Chi has evolved into a widely used mind–body practice increasingly incorporated into complementary therapy, rehabilitation, and public health. This study provides an updated global bibliometric overview, with VOSviewer mapping publication performance, co-authorship networks, and keyword-based thematic clusters. Articles and reviews with Tai Chi–related terms in the title were retrieved from Scopus, with no restrictions on language or publication year. A total of 2253 publications from 1978 to 2025 were analyzed, revealing steady growth, concentrated largely in the past decade. China led the publication output, while the United States had the highest number of citations, forming a dual-core pattern. The field is largely driven by a small group of authors and regional clusters, and its visibility in mainstream medical journals remains limited. Nine software-generated keyword clusters were manually synthesized into five themes: motor function (balance and fall prevention), musculoskeletal conditions (osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, fibromyalgia), chronic disease management (cardiovascular disease, stroke, COPD), psychological health (quality of life, depression, anxiety, mindfulness), and cognitive aging (dementia, mild cognitive impairment). Future progress requires greater methodological rigor, including mechanistic inquiry, long-term study designs, and community- or population-level applications, along with stronger international collaboration and deeper integration into clinical and public health practice.
AB - Tai Chi has evolved into a widely used mind–body practice increasingly incorporated into complementary therapy, rehabilitation, and public health. This study provides an updated global bibliometric overview, with VOSviewer mapping publication performance, co-authorship networks, and keyword-based thematic clusters. Articles and reviews with Tai Chi–related terms in the title were retrieved from Scopus, with no restrictions on language or publication year. A total of 2253 publications from 1978 to 2025 were analyzed, revealing steady growth, concentrated largely in the past decade. China led the publication output, while the United States had the highest number of citations, forming a dual-core pattern. The field is largely driven by a small group of authors and regional clusters, and its visibility in mainstream medical journals remains limited. Nine software-generated keyword clusters were manually synthesized into five themes: motor function (balance and fall prevention), musculoskeletal conditions (osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, fibromyalgia), chronic disease management (cardiovascular disease, stroke, COPD), psychological health (quality of life, depression, anxiety, mindfulness), and cognitive aging (dementia, mild cognitive impairment). Future progress requires greater methodological rigor, including mechanistic inquiry, long-term study designs, and community- or population-level applications, along with stronger international collaboration and deeper integration into clinical and public health practice.
KW - complementary medicine
KW - mind–body exercise
KW - Taichi
KW - Traditional Chinese exercises
KW - visualization
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105029075518
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105029075518#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.3390/sports14010014
DO - 10.3390/sports14010014
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:105029075518
SN - 2075-4663
VL - 14
JO - Sports
JF - Sports
IS - 1
M1 - 14
ER -