Abstract

Analyzing a large data set of publications drawn from the most competitive journals in the natural and social sciences we show that research careers exhibit the broad distributions of individual achievement characteristic of systems in which cumulative advantage plays a key role. While most researchers are personally aware of the competition implicit in the publication process, little is known about the levels of inequality at the level of individual researchers. We analyzed both productivity and impact measures for a large set of researchers publishing in high-impact journals. For each researcher cohort we calculated Gini inequality coefficients, with average Gini values around 0.48 for total publications and 0.73 for total citations. For perspective, these observed values are well in excess of the inequality levels observed for personal income in developing countries. Investigating possible sources of this inequality, we identify two potential mechanisms that act at the level of the individual that may play defining roles in the emergence of the broad productivity and impact distributions found in science. First, we show that the average time interval between a researcher's successive publications in top journals decreases with each subsequent publication. Second, after controlling for the time dependent features of citation distributions, we compare the citation impact of subsequent publications within a researcher's publication record. We find that as researchers continue to publish in top journals, there is more likely to be a decreasing trend in the relative citation impact with each subsequent publication. This pattern highlights the difficulty of repeatedly publishing high-impact research and the intriguing possibility that confirmation bias plays a role in the evaluation of scientific careers.

Highlights

  • The business of science is constantly evolving, on multiple levels and time scales, and this evolution has a profound impact on the institutions and individuals engaged in the production of scientific research

  • We present our analysis of the aggregate citation distribution of individual researchers and observe remarkable statistical regularities in the broad distribution of total citations within each publication ‘arena’

  • 2 Results 2.1 General evidence of cumulative advantage in scientific careers Given the complex institutional, economic, and behavioral factors at play in the academic career system it is no surprise that careers in science demonstrate two of the hallmark features of complex systems: strong correlations and long-term memory

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Summary

Introduction

The business of science is constantly evolving, on multiple levels and time scales, and this evolution has a profound impact on the institutions and individuals engaged in the production of scientific research. Nat./PNAS/Sci. Inequality measures are calculated from the distribution of citation impact, P(C ), and from the distribution of productivity, P(Np), for the cohorts of scientists whose first publication occurred in the indicated time intervals.

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