Abstract
A scientist may publish tens or hundreds of papers over a career, but these contributions are not evenly spaced in time. Sixty years of studies on career productivity patterns in a variety of fields suggest an intuitive and universal pattern: Productivity tends to rise rapidly to an early peak and then gradually declines. Here, we test the universality of this conventional narrative by analyzing the structures of individual faculty productivity time series, constructed from over 200,000 publications and matched with hiring data for 2,453 tenure-track faculty in all 205 PhD-granting computer science departments in the United States and Canada. Unlike prior studies, which considered only some faculty or some institutions, or lacked common career reference points, here we combine a large bibliographic dataset with comprehensive information on career transitions that covers an entire field of study. We show that the conventional narrative confidently describes only one-fifth of faculty, regardless of department prestige or researcher gender, and the remaining four-fifths of faculty exhibit a rich diversity of productivity patterns. To explain this diversity, we introduce a simple model of productivity trajectories and explore correlations between its parameters and researcher covariates, showing that departmental prestige predicts overall individual productivity and the timing of the transition from first- to last-author publications. These results demonstrate the unpredictability of productivity over time and open the door for new efforts to understand how environmental and individual factors shape scientific productivity.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Reference45 articles.
1. Way SF Larremore DB Clauset A (2016) Gender, productivity, and prestige in computer science faculty hiring networks. Proc 25th Intl Conf World Wide Web, 1169–1179.
2. Scientific output and recognition: A study in the operation of the reward system in science;Cole;Am Socio Rev,1967
3. Improving productivity: What faculty think about it—and its effect on quality;Massy;Change,1995
4. The economics of science;Stephan;J Econ Lit,1996
5. Men’s creative production rate at different ages and in different countries;Lehman;Sci Mon,1954
Cited by
81 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献