Published June 3, 2022
| Version v1
Journal article
Open
Flat teams drive scientific innovation
Creators
- 1. University of Chicago
- 2. University of Pittsburgh
Description
With teams growing in all areas of scientific and scholarly research, we explore the relationship between team structure and the character of knowledge they produce. Drawing on 89,575 self-reports of team member research activity underlying scientific publications, we show how individual activities cohere into broad roles of 1) leadership through the direction and presentation of research and 2) support through data collection, analysis, and discussion. The hidden hierarchy of a scientific team is characterized by its lead (or L) ratio of members playing leadership roles to total team size. The L ratio is validated through correlation with imputed contributions to the specific paper and to science as a whole, which we use to effectively extrapolate the L ratio for 16,397,750 papers where roles are not explicit. We find that, relative to flat, egalitarian teams, tall, hierarchical teams produce less novelty and more often develop existing ideas, increase productivity for those on top and decrease it for those beneath, and increase short-term citations but decrease long-term influence. These effects hold within person—the same person on the same-sized team produces science much more likely to disruptively innovate if they work on a flat, high-L-ratio team. These results suggest the critical role flat teams play for sustainable scientific advance and the training and advancement of scientists.
Files
Flat-teams-drive-scientific-innovation.pdf
Files
(2.4 MB)
| Name | Size | Download all |
|---|---|---|
|
Article md5:3bb0afa5e8bad8fa84dd6288f750c647 |
2.2 MB | Preview Download |
|
Supporting information md5:35253233856155cc8183a1d6d31dd3ac |
199.7 kB | Preview Download |
Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1073/pnas.2200927119
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:5295
Funding
- Air Force Office of Scientific Research
- FA9550-19-1-0354
- National Science Foundation
- 1829366
- National Science Foundation
- 1800956
- Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
- HR00111820006
- Pitt Cyber Institute
- Richard King Mellon Foundation