So, shall I assume you spent more than the 10s it took me at
http://scholar.google.com/scholar?cites=1966743936993361656&as_sdt=2005&sciodt=1,5&hl=en
...then you went through them to reach your conclusion the work was cited but not "used"...or is it more likely you are biased to the point of fudging?
Do you remember the post where I went through this? Apparently not. I explained exactly what I did---found some of ABC's scholarly articles (because Web Of Science does better with article-citations than book-citations), skimmed a dozen or articles that cite those articles, and gave what I believe to be accurate summaries of why and how they cite ABC's ideas. I'm sorry that you misremember this as "less than 10s of fudging". It's almost as though
you are failing to read or understand opposing arguments, but are simply sticking to your preconception that your opponents are stupid.
OK, you've listed citations to their book. Let's begin, shall we?
http://books.google.com/books?hl=en...2jxjoiFAJKaEYZdA#v=onepage&q=andersen&f=false
They cite ABC only to say "ABC argue that <this example I'm using> is not a good example of paradigm change, but I disagree".
http://cje.oxfordjournals.org/content/32/2/295.abstract
Basically conflates ABC and Kuhn. "Science isn't perfect, it proceeds by paradigm shifts which show that evidence and disproof are socially constructed; see Kuhn, ABC, etc. etc." Doesn't use their specific cognitive methods for anything.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1389041709000035
"It has long been held in cognitive science that scientific problem solving lies on a continuum with the way people use reasoning to solve more ordinary problems. Much research drawing from the history of scientific practices provide studies of how scientists extend and refine basic cognitive strategies, in explicit and critically reflective attempts, to devise methods for probing and understanding nature^1" Citation #1 is a generic splat of 16 articles discussing cognition and science, including ABC which is not otherwise discussed specifically.
http://books.google.com/books?hl=en...rBBI_JDM2CW1LqR8#v=onepage&q=andersen&f=false
is a book with a chapter written by Andersen.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1756-8765.2009.01048.x/full
In a discussion of visual images, "New information can force a reevaluation of what external representations are supposed to represent, especially if it presents anomalies (Anderson, Barker, & Chen, 2006, pp. 59–65)"; no other reference to this work. This article actually discusses "process models", so it's as close as we've come to a hit.
http://books.google.com/books?hl=en...R-xpL9dBoiBMX7L8#v=onepage&q=andersen&f=false
In the intro, mentions ABC without comment in a wall-of-citations literature survey.
http://spontaneousgenerations.libra...ontaneousGenerations/article/view/11938/11182
I quote: "This latter type of work has in turn given rise to work that models conceptual change in science on cognitive theories of concepts (e.g., Andersen et al. 2006). Interesting as this latter work is, I shall not be paying attention to it here ... " At least she calls it interesting, let's call that a hit.
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10849-008-9078-1
I quote: "A smaller literature does specifically address semantic networks in applications such as professional communication (Khalifa and Liu 2006), education (Jonassen 2005), experimental cognitive modeling (Barsalou 1992), modeling conceptual change in the history of science (Andersen et al. 2006; Hyman 2007), the use of concept mapping tools (which are essentially semantic networks without formal semantics) to express knowledge (Novak 1998), and so on. However, so far, operationalization of the results through the computational applica- tion of the networks is uncommon."
http://books.google.com/books?hl=en...V3SwbT2NiEWgsg4I#v=onepage&q=andersen&f=false
Cites Andersen for specific interpretations of specific cases, "Andersen (2006) is right to give credit to Kepler ...", that disagree with aspects of Kuhn.
http://books.google.com/books?hl=en...g26C7BXDQ6INQSWs#v=onepage&q=andersen&f=false
Cites Andersen for disagreeing with a specific point of Kuhn's.
http://frankzenker.de/downloads/Zenker 2010 From Features via Frames to Spaces.pdf
Flat-out disagreement. "In a recent review of Andersen, Barker and Chen (2006), who prefer the term ‘dynamic frame’, Thagard (2009: 844) points out: "Although the attribute-value account of represent- ation continues to be influential, there are several other approaches that suggest that the dy- namic frame account of concepts used by Andersen, Barker and Chen is at best incomplete and at worst seriously inaccurate" "
http://aisel.aisnet.org/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1514&context=amcis2009
No distinction from Kuhn: " First, Hevner et al. (2004) ... do not address the incommensurate nature of natural science and behavioral theories (Andersen et al. 2006; Kuhn 1962). "
http://jigpal.oxfordjournals.org/content/18/3/430.short
Finally! A clean hit. This article cites ABC extensively.
ETA: OK, let's get to the uncomplicated point.
You propose that physics should be managed differently, because you identified ABC (2006) as a cognitive-science technique that
you claim can be applied to research management and guide it towards paradigm changes. It is
your job to defend this claim, and if there's support for this claim in the scholarly literature it is
your job to point it out. If I'm missing something in my lit survey here, well, sorry---lit surveys are supposed to be your job, not mine.