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Elite Group of Researchers Rule Scientific Publishing

sciencehabit writes Publishing is one of the most ballyhooed metrics of scientific careers, and every researcher hates to have a gap in that part of his or her CV. Here's some consolation: A new study finds that very few scientists—fewer than 1%—manage to publish a paper every year. But these 150,608 scientists dominate the research journals, having their names on 41% of all papers. Among the most highly cited work, this elite group can be found among the co-authors of 87% of papers. Students, meanwhile, may spend years on research that yields only one or a few papers. "[I]n these cases, the research system may be exploiting the work of millions of young scientists," the authors conclude.

2 of 123 comments (clear)

  1. flawed methodology by tommeke100 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They took a publications database between 1996 and 2011, which contains about 15,000,000 authors.
    There they found only 150,000 published every of those years.
    Of course not all of those 15 million have been working in research for 16 years. Most graduate/PhD students are in research for 5 years and then they need to find another job.
    Actually most people at my company were author or co-author of a paper at some point, and we only published because of some grants that required it.
    So if you take out the people who really only have a couple of publications, or published for a small period of time, the picture will be completely different.
    Take into account that you need people who's career actually span the 1996-2011 period (which filters out probably like 30% of people genuinely having a successfull academic career), and they actually paint a realistic picture of who the profs are or research leads.

  2. Re:What the fuck are they supposed to do? by Beck_Neard · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because it's almost literally impossible for someone to actually put in all of the work required to publish hundreds of papers during their career. A paper might typically take six months of gruelling, full-time work. Instead of actually doing the work, what a lot of scientists do is they bring in a lot of students and act as project supervisors, as it says in the article: "Many of these prolific scientists are likely the heads of laboratories or research groups; they bring in funding, supervise research, and add their names to the numerous papers that result." In other words, they drop in for maybe half an hour every two weeks or so to get an 'update' (without really understanding anything), throw around some bs pieces of 'advice' (which everyone ignores) and then leave.

    --
    A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.