Understanding determinants of success in academic careers is critically important to both scholars and their employing organizations. While considerable research efforts have been made in this direction, there is still a lack of a quantitative approach to modeling the academic careers of scholars due to the massive confounding factors. To this end, in this paper, we propose to explore the determinants of academic career success through an empirical and predictive modeling perspective, with a focus on two typical academic honors, i.e., IEEE Fellow and ACM Fellow. We analyze the importance of different factors quantitatively, and obtain some insightful findings. Specifically, we analyze the co-author network and find that potential scholars work closely with influential scholars early on and more closely as they grow. Then we compare the academic performance of male and female Fellows. After comparison, we find that to be elected, females need to put in more effort than males. In addition, we also find that being a Fellow could not bring the improvements of citations and productivity growth. We hope these derived factors and findings can help scholars to improve their competitiveness and develop well in their academic careers.
翻译:了解学术生涯成功与否的决定因素对学者及其雇用组织都至关重要。虽然在这方面作出了相当大的研究努力,但由于巨大的混乱因素,目前仍然缺乏一个量化的方法来模拟学者的学术生涯。为此,我们提议,在本文件中,通过一个经验和预测的建模角度,探讨学术生涯成功与否的决定因素,重点是两个典型的学术荣誉,即IEEE研究员和ACM研究员。我们从数量上分析不同因素的重要性,并获得一些有见地的结论。具体地说,我们分析共同作者网络,发现潜在学者与有影响力的学者在成长之初就密切合作。然后我们比较男女研究员的学术成绩。经过比较后,我们发现女性当选后需要比男性付出更多努力。此外,我们还发现作为研究员不可能带来引文和生产力增长的改善。我们希望这些衍生的因素和发现能够帮助学者提高他们的竞争力,并在学术生涯中发展良好。