The Diversity–Innovation Paradox in Science

Prior work finds a diversity paradox: Diversity breeds innovation, yet underrepresented groups that diversify organizations have less successful careers within them. Does the diversity paradox hold for scientists as well? We study this by utilizing a near-complete population of ∼1.2 million US docto...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2020-04, Vol.117 (17), p.9284-9291
Hauptverfasser: Hofstra, Bas, Kulkarni, Vivek V., Galvez, Sebastian Munoz-Najar, He, Bryan, Jurafsky, Dan, McFarland, Daniel A.
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container_end_page 9291
container_issue 17
container_start_page 9284
container_title Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS
container_volume 117
creator Hofstra, Bas
Kulkarni, Vivek V.
Galvez, Sebastian Munoz-Najar
He, Bryan
Jurafsky, Dan
McFarland, Daniel A.
description Prior work finds a diversity paradox: Diversity breeds innovation, yet underrepresented groups that diversify organizations have less successful careers within them. Does the diversity paradox hold for scientists as well? We study this by utilizing a near-complete population of ∼1.2 million US doctoral recipients from 1977 to 2015 and following their careers into publishing and faculty positions. We use text analysis and machine learning to answer a series of questions: How do we detect scientific innovations? Are underrepresented groups more likely to generate scientific innovations? And are the innovations of underrepresented groups adopted and rewarded? Our analyses show that underrepresented groups produce higher rates of scientific novelty. However, their novel contributions are devalued and discounted: For example, novel contributions by gender and racial minorities are taken up by other scholars at lower rates than novel contributions by gender and racial majorities, and equally impactful contributions of gender and racial minorities are less likely to result in successful scientific careers than for majority groups. These results suggest there may be unwarranted reproduction of stratification in academic careers that discounts diversity’s role in innovation and partly explains the underrepresentation of some groups in academia.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; MEDLINE; PubMed Central; Alma/SFX Local Collection; Free Full-Text Journals in Chemistry
subjects Careers
Cultural Diversity
Discounts
Faculty
Female
Gender
Humans
Innovations
Inventions - trends
Learning algorithms
Machine learning
Male
Minority & ethnic groups
Minority Groups - education
Minority Groups - psychology
Paradoxes
Racial Groups - education
Racial Groups - psychology
Racism - economics
Racism - psychology
Science
Social Behavior
Social Sciences
title The Diversity–Innovation Paradox in Science
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