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2015
DOI: 10.1128/iai.02939-14
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Competitive Science: Is Competition Ruining Science?

Abstract: Science has always been a competitive undertaking. Despite recognition of the benefits of cooperation and team science, reduced availability of funding and jobs has made science more competitive than ever. Here we consider the benefits of competition in providing incentives to scientists and the adverse effects of competition on resource sharing, research integrity, and creativity. The history of science shows that transformative discoveries often occur in the absence of competition, which only emerges once fi… Show more

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Cited by 95 publications
(68 citation statements)
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“…Moving from a descriptive to prescriptive approach, we close with a discussion of recommendations meant to promote transparency, openness, and reproducibility. These recommendations are focused not only on discouraging QRPs but also on promoting greater sharing and collaboration within our field (for review papers on these issues, see Fang & Casadevall, 2015;Nosek & Bar-Anan, 2012;.…”
Section: Recommendations For Promoting Transparency Openness and Rementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moving from a descriptive to prescriptive approach, we close with a discussion of recommendations meant to promote transparency, openness, and reproducibility. These recommendations are focused not only on discouraging QRPs but also on promoting greater sharing and collaboration within our field (for review papers on these issues, see Fang & Casadevall, 2015;Nosek & Bar-Anan, 2012;.…”
Section: Recommendations For Promoting Transparency Openness and Rementioning
confidence: 99%
“…[7] Fourth, creativity requires a different approach to teaching. We need to foster the autonomy of young trainees to seek their own solutions and place them in environments that foster creativity and networking [5]. We need to realize that technology does not necessarily foster creativity.…”
Section: What Could Be Done?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By the same token, appreciation of the power of epigenetics, such as parent-child attachment on the phenotypic expression of genes, was long considered off limits or, at best, met with frowns and unapologetic questioning. Fang and Casadevall [5] wrote, "Important scientific findings arise from unfettered exploration, the passion of individual scientists to understand a problem, and research environments that foster interaction" (p. 1231). Does the current atmosphere of rules of conversation and limits on exchange do enough to foster this interaction and creativity?…”
Section: Is Creativity In Psychiatry and Medicine Lost?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Diversity of scales in pace and budget. The increasingly all-consuming competitive nature of academic life often discourages speculation, innovation, and collaboration (Hagstrom 1974;Cabota et al 2013;Fang & Casadevall 2015). Little time and energy is left for the reflection needed to develop original ideas (Alberts et al 2014).…”
Section: Box 3 Shifting the Dominant Narrativementioning
confidence: 99%