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I'd Like to Thank the Academy, Team Spillovers, and Network Centrality

机译:我要感谢学院,团队溢出和网络中心化

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This article uses Academy Award nominations for acting to explore how artistic achievement is situated within a collaborative context. Assessment of individual effort is particularly difficult in film because quality is not transparent, but the project-based nature of the field allows us to observe individuals in multiple collaborative contexts. We address these issues with analyses of the top-10 credited roles from films released in theaters between 1936 and 2005. Controlling for an actor's personal history and the basic traits of a film, we explore two predictions. First, we find that status, as measured by asymmetric centrality in the network of screen credits, is an efficient measure of star power and mediates the relationship between experience and formal artistic consecration. Second, we find that actors are most likely to be consecrated when working with elite collaborators. We conclude by arguing that selection into privileged work teams provides cumulative advantage. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
机译:本文使用奥斯卡金像奖提名来探讨在合作背景下艺术成就的定位。在电影中,对个人努力的评估尤其困难,因为质量不是透明的,但是基于项目的领域性质使我们可以在多个协作环境中观察个人。我们通过分析1936年至2005年间在电影院上映的电影中排名前10位的角色来解决这些问题。控制演员的个人历史和电影的基本特征,我们探索了两种预测。首先,我们发现,以银幕信用网络中的不对称中心性来衡量,地位是衡量明星力量的有效手段,它可以调解经验与形式艺术奉献之间的关系。其次,我们发现与精英合作者合作时,演员最有可能被奉献。我们通过争辩说,选择进入特权工作团队可提供累积优势。 [出版物摘要]

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    《American Sociological Review》 |2010年第1期|p.31-51|共21页
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    Gabriel Rossman,3 Nicole Esparza,b and Phillip Bonacich3a University of California-Los Angelesb University of Southern CaliforniaCorresponding Author:Gabriel Rossman, Department of Sociology, 264Haines Hall, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1551,USAE-mail: rossman@soc.ucla.eduGabriel Rossman is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Califomia-Los Angeles and an Alfred P. Sloan Industry Studies fellow. His research interests include the production of culture, cultural capital, and economic sociology. He is currently working on several projects that track the diffusion of pop songs between radio stations.Nicole Esparza recently joined the faculty of the School of Policy, Planning, and Development at the University of Southern California after completing a Robert Wood Johnson Scholar in Health Policy Research postdoctoral fellowship at Harvard University. Her research interests include organizational dynamics, urban inequality, and economic sociology.Phillip Bonacich, Emeritus Professor of Sociology at University of California-Los Angeles, has long been interested in network measures of status, power, and centrality. His current work is on models of social exchange in networks.;

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