TL;DR
This paper examines how faculty hiring networks influence the spread of scientific ideas, revealing that ideas from prestigious institutions diffuse faster and more broadly, thus contributing to epistemic inequality in science.
Contribution
It empirically demonstrates the role of faculty hiring in idea dissemination and models how institutional prestige affects long-term idea spread across the network.
Findings
Ideas from prestigious institutions spread more quickly.
Faculty hiring facilitates idea dissemination in science.
Structural inequality impacts the diffusion of scientific ideas.
Abstract
The spread of ideas in the scientific community is often viewed as a competition, in which good ideas spread further because of greater intrinsic fitness, and publication venue and citation counts correlate with importance and impact. However, relatively little is known about how structural factors influence the spread of ideas, and specifically how where an idea originates might influence how it spreads. Here, we investigate the role of faculty hiring networks, which embody the set of researcher transitions from doctoral to faculty institutions, in shaping the spread of ideas in computer science, and the importance of where in the network an idea originates. We consider comprehensive data on the hiring events of 5032 faculty at all 205 Ph.D.-granting departments of computer science in the U.S. and Canada, and on the timing and titles of 200,476 associated publications. Analyzing five…
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