Scientists Hit Their Creative Peak Early in their Careers
The most
innovative young scientists are the ones who keep producing research -- but
their research is less innovative as they get older. The most innovative
From, Ohio State News
By Jeff Grabmeier
October 10, 2022 -- A new study provides the best
evidence to date that scientists overall are most innovative and creative early
in their careers.
Findings showed that,
on one important measure, the impact of biomedical scientists’ published work
drops by between one-half to two-thirds over the course of their careers.
“That’s a huge decline
in impact,” said Bruce
Weinberg, co-author of the study and professor of economics at The Ohio State University.
“We found that as they
get older, the work of biomedical scientists was just not as innovative and
impactful.”
But the reasons behind
this trend of declining innovativeness make the findings more nuanced and show
why it is still important to support scientists later in their careers,
Weinberg said.
The study was published
online Oct. 7, 2022 in the Journal of Human Resources.
Researchers have been
studying the relationship between age or experience with innovativeness for
nearly 150 years, but no consensus has emerged. Findings, in fact, have been
“all over the map,” Weinberg said.
“For a topic that so
many people with so many approaches have studied for so long, it is pretty
remarkable that we still don’t have a conclusive answer.”
One advantage of this
study is that the authors had a huge dataset to work with – 5.6 million
biomedical science articles published over a 30-year period, from 1980 to 2009,
and compiled by MEDLINE. These data include detailed information on the
authors.
This new study measured
the innovativeness of the articles by biomedical scientists using a standard method
– the number of times other scientists mention (or “cite”) a study in their own
work. The more times a study is cited, the more important it is thought
to be.
With detailed
information on the authors of each paper, the researchers in this study were able
to compare how often scientists’ work was cited early in their careers compared
to later in their careers.
As they analyzed the
data, Weinberg and his colleagues made a discovery that was a key to
understanding how innovation changes over a career.
They found that
scientists who were the least innovative early in their careers tended to drop
out of the field and quit publishing new research. It was the most productive,
the most important young scholars who were continuing to produce research 20 or
30 years later.
“Early in their
careers, scientists show a wide range of innovativeness. But over time,
we see selective attrition of the people who are less innovative,” Weinberg
said.
“So when you look at
all biomedical scientists as a group, it doesn’t look like innovation is
declining over time. But the fact that the least innovative researchers are
dropping out when they are relatively young disguises the fact that, for any
one person, innovativeness tends to decline over their career.”
Results showed that for
the average researcher, a scientific article they published late in their
career was cited one-half to two-thirds less often than an article published
early in their careers.
But it wasn’t just
citation counts that suggest researchers were less innovative later in their
career.
“We constructed
additional metrics that captured the breadth of an article’s impact based on
the range of fields that cite it, whether the article is employing the best and
latest ideas, citing the best and latest research, and whether the article is
drawing from multiple disciplines,” said Huifeng Yu, a co-author, who worked on
the study as a PhD student at the University at Albany, SUNY.
“These other metrics
also lead to the same conclusion about declining innovativeness.”
The findings showing
selective attrition among less-innovative scientists can help explain why
previous studies have had such conflicting results, Weinberg said.
Studies using Nobel
Laureates and other eminent researchers, for whom attrition is relatively small,
tend to find earlier peak ages for innovation. In contrast, studies using
broader cross-sections of scientists don’t normally find an early peak in
creativity, because they don’t account for the attrition.
Weinberg noted that
attrition in the scientific community may not relate only to innovativeness.
Scientists who are women or from underrepresented minorities may not have had
the opportunities they needed to succeed, although this study can’t quantify
that effect.
“Those scientists who
succeeded probably did so through a combination of talent, luck, personal
background and prior training,” he said.
The findings suggest
that organizations that fund scientists have to maintain a delicate balance
between supporting youth and experience.
“Young scientists tend
to be at their peak of creativity, but there is also a big mix with some being
much more innovative than others. You may not be supporting the very best
researchers,” said Gerald Marschke, a co-author of the study and associate
professor of economics at the University at Albany,
“With older, more
experienced scientists, you are getting the ones who have stood the test of
time, but who on average are not at their best anymore.”
Other co-authors on the
study were Matthew Ross of New York University and Joseph Staudt of the U.S.
Census Bureau.
The research was
supported by the National Institute on
Aging, the Office of Behavioral
and Social Science Research, the National
Science Foundation, the Ewing
Marion Kauffman and Alfred P. Sloan foundations,
and the National Bureau of Economic
Research.
Scientists
hit their creative peak early in their careers (osu.edu)
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