articleAmerican Sociological ReviewSep 1, 2015Closed access

Tradition and Innovation in Scientists’ Research Strategies

University of California, Los Angeles · University of Chicago

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Abstract

What factors affect a scientist’s choice of research problem? Qualitative research in the history and sociology of science suggests that this choice is patterned by an “essential tension” between productive tradition and risky innovation. We examine this tension through Bourdieu’s field theory of science, and we explore it empirically by analyzing millions of biomedical abstracts from MEDLINE. We represent the evolving state of chemical knowledge with networks extracted from these abstracts. We then develop a typology of research strategies on these networks. Scientists can introduce novel chemicals and chemical relationships (innovation) or delve deeper into known ones (tradition). They can consolidate…

Citation impact

598
total citations
FWCI
25.94
Percentile
100%
References
110
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Typology
  • Publication
  • Biomedicine
  • Psychological intervention
  • Field (mathematics)
  • Bridge (graph theory)
  • Sociology
  • Epistemology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Industry, innovation and infrastructure
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