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1.
PLoS One ; 16(12): e0259965, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34851978

RESUMO

As scientific research becomes increasingly cross-disciplinary, many universities seek to support collaborative activity through new buildings and institutions. This study examines the impacts of spatial proximity on collaboration at MIT from 2005 to 2015. By exploiting a shift in the location of researchers due to building renovations, we evaluate how discrete changes in physical proximity affect the likelihood that researchers co-author. The findings suggest that moving researchers into the same building increases their propensity to collaborate, with the effect plateauing five years after the move. The effects are large when compared to the average rate of collaboration among pairs of researchers, which suggests that spatial proximity is an important tool to support cross-disciplinary collaborative science. Furthermore, buildings that host researchers working in the same or related fields and from multiple departments have a larger effect on their propensity to collaborate.


Assuntos
Pesquisa Biomédica/organização & administração , Comunicação Interdisciplinar , Comportamento Espacial , Pesquisa Biomédica/estatística & dados numéricos , Arquitetura de Instituições de Saúde , Humanos , Movimento , Pesquisadores/psicologia , Pesquisadores/estatística & dados numéricos
2.
PLoS One ; 12(6): e0179334, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28640829

RESUMO

Academic research is increasingly cross-disciplinary and collaborative, between and within institutions. In this context, what is the role and relevance of an individual's spatial position on a campus? We examine the collaboration patterns of faculty at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, through their academic output (papers and patents), and their organizational structures (institutional affiliation and spatial configuration) over a 10-year time span. An initial comparison of output types reveals: 1. diverging trends in the composition of collaborative teams over time (size, faculty versus non-faculty, etc.); and 2. substantively different patterns of cross-building and cross-disciplinary collaboration. We then construct a multi-layered network of authors, and find two significant features of collaboration on campus: 1. a network topology and community structure that reveals spatial versus institutional collaboration bias; and 2. a persistent relationship between proximity and collaboration, well fit with an exponential decay model. This relationship is consistent for both papers and patents, and present also in exclusively cross-disciplinary work. These insights contribute an architectural dimension to the field of scientometrics, and take a first step toward empirical space-planning policy that supports collaboration within institutions.


Assuntos
Comportamento Cooperativo , Ciência/organização & administração , Ciência/estatística & dados numéricos , Docentes , Patentes como Assunto , Publicações/estatística & dados numéricos , Universidades/organização & administração
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