Paulus Frieder Michel, Rademacher Lena, Schäfer Theo Alexander Jose, Müller-Pinzler Laura, Krach Sören
Social Neuroscience Lab, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Lübeck, Lübeck, Germany.
PLoS One. 2015 Nov 10;10(11):e0142537. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0142537. eCollection 2015.
The incentive structure of a scientist's life is increasingly mimicking economic principles. While intensely criticized, the journal impact factor (JIF) has taken a role as the new currency for scientists. Successful goal-directed behavior in academia thus requires knowledge about the JIF. Using functional neuroimaging we examined how the JIF, as a powerful incentive in academia, has shaped the behavior of scientists and the reward signal in the striatum. We demonstrate that the reward signal in the nucleus accumbens increases with higher JIF during the anticipation of a publication and found a positive correlation with the personal publication record (pJIF) supporting the notion that scientists have incorporated the predominant reward principle of the scientific community in their reward system. The implications of this behavioral adaptation within the ecological niche of the scientist's habitat remain unknown, but may also have effects which were not intended by the community.
科学家的生活激励结构越来越多地模仿经济原则。尽管受到强烈批评,但期刊影响因子(JIF)已成为科学家的新货币。因此,学术界成功的目标导向行为需要了解JIF。我们使用功能神经成像技术研究了JIF作为学术界的强大激励因素,如何塑造了科学家的行为以及纹状体中的奖励信号。我们证明,在预期发表论文时,伏隔核中的奖励信号会随着JIF的提高而增加,并且发现与个人发表记录(pJIF)呈正相关,这支持了科学家在其奖励系统中纳入了科学界主要奖励原则的观点。这种行为适应在科学家栖息地生态位中的影响尚不清楚,但也可能产生科学界未曾预料到的效果。