Persistence and Uncertainty in the Academic Career
Alexander M. Petersen, Massimo Riccaboni, H. Eugene Stanley, Fabio, Pammolli

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the dynamics of academic careers, revealing increasing returns for top scientists, symmetric leptokurtic growth distributions, and how short-term contracts and collaboration impact career stability.
Contribution
It introduces a proportional growth model capturing productivity dynamics, career longevity, and the effects of contracts and collaboration in academia.
Findings
Top scientists exhibit increasing returns.
Production growth follows a symmetric leptokurtic distribution.
Short-term contracts increase career vulnerability.
Abstract
Understanding how institutional changes within academia may affect the overall potential of science requires a better quantitative representation of how careers evolve over time. Since knowledge spillovers, cumulative advantage, competition, and collaboration are distinctive features of the academic profession, both the employment relationship and the procedures for assigning recognition and allocating funding should be designed to account for these factors. We study the annual production n_{i}(t) of a given scientist i by analyzing longitudinal career data for 200 leading scientists and 100 assistant professors from the physics community. We compare our results with 21,156 sports careers. Our empirical analysis of individual productivity dynamics shows that (i) there are increasing returns for the top individuals within the competitive cohort, and that (ii) the distribution of…
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Taxonomy
Topicsscientometrics and bibliometrics research · Sports Analytics and Performance · Complex Systems and Time Series Analysis
