Oregon Hearing Research Center, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon, 97239-3098, USA.
Okinawa Institute for Science and Technology, Onna-son, Okinawa, 904-0412, Japan.
Nat Commun. 2018 Nov 27;9(1):4840. doi: 10.1038/s41467-018-07034-y.
As academic careers become more competitive, junior scientists need to understand the value that mentorship brings to their success in academia. Previous research has found that, unsurprisingly, successful mentors tend to train successful students. But what characteristics of this relationship predict success, and how? We analyzed an open-access database of 18,856 researchers who have undergone both graduate and postdoctoral training, compiled across several fields of biomedical science with an emphasis on neuroscience. Our results show that postdoctoral mentors were more instrumental to trainees' success compared to graduate mentors. Trainees' success in academia was also predicted by the degree of intellectual synthesis between their graduate and postdoctoral mentors. Researchers were more likely to succeed if they trained under mentors with disparate expertise and integrated that expertise into their own work. This pattern has held up over at least 40 years, despite fluctuations in the number of students and availability of independent research positions.
随着学术生涯竞争的加剧,初级科学家需要了解指导对他们在学术界取得成功的价值。先前的研究发现,毫不奇怪,成功的导师往往培养出成功的学生。但是,这种关系的哪些特点预示着成功,以及如何预示成功?我们分析了一个包含 18856 名研究人员的开放获取数据库,这些研究人员在多个生物医学科学领域接受了研究生和博士后培训,重点是神经科学。我们的结果表明,与研究生导师相比,博士后导师对受训者的成功更有帮助。研究生和博士后导师之间的知识综合程度也可以预测受训者在学术界的成功。如果研究人员在具有不同专业知识的导师的指导下进行培训,并将这些专业知识融入自己的工作中,他们更有可能取得成功。尽管学生人数和独立研究职位的数量有所波动,但这种模式至少持续了 40 年。