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Differential Social Network Effects on Scholarly Productivity: An Intersectional Analysis

机译:社会网络差异对学术生产力的影响:交叉分析

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摘要

Academic productivity is realized through resources obtained from professional networks in which scientists are embedded. Using a national survey of academic faculty in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) fields across multiple institution types, we examine how the structure of professional networks affects scholarly productivity and how those effects may differ by race, ethnicity, and gender. We find that network size masks important differences in composition. Using negative binomial regression, we find that both the size and composition of professional networks affect scientific productivity, but bigger is not always better. We find that instrumental networks increase scholarly productivity, while advice networks reduce it. There are important interactive effects that are masked by modeling only direct effects. We find that white men are especially advantaged by instrumental networks, and women are especially advantaged by advice networks.
机译:学术生产力是通过从嵌入科学家的专业网络中获得的资源来实现的。通过对跨多种机构类型的科学,技术,工程和数学(STEM)领域的学术教师进行的全国调查,我们研究了专业网络的结构如何影响学术生产力,以及这些影响如何因种族,种族和性别而不同。我们发现网络规模掩盖了组成上的重要差异。使用负二项式回归,我们发现专业网络的规模和组成都会影响科学生产力,但规模越大不一定越好。我们发现工具网络提高了学术生产力,而建议网络则降低了学术生产力。仅对直接效果进行建模可以掩盖重要的交互效果。我们发现白人男性在工具网络中特别有优势,而女性在咨询网络中特别有优势。

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