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      The double-edged sword of recombination in breakthrough innovation : The Double-Edged Sword of Recombination

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      Strategic Management Journal
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          An Introduction to the Bootstrap

          Statistics is a subject of many uses and surprisingly few effective practitioners. The traditional road to statistical knowledge is blocked, for most, by a formidable wall of mathematics. The approach in An Introduction to the Bootstrap avoids that wall. It arms scientists and engineers, as well as statisticians, with the computational techniques they need to analyze and understand complicated data sets.
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            The Matthew Effect in Science: The reward and communication systems of science are considered.

            R K Merton (1968)
            This account of the Matthew effect is another small exercise in the psychosociological analysis of the workings of science as a social institution. The initial problem is transformed by a shift in theoretical perspective. As originally identified, the Matthew effect was construed in terms of enhancement of the position of already eminent scientists who are given disproportionate credit in cases of collaboration or of independent multiple discoveries. Its significance was thus confined to its implications for the reward system of science. By shifting the angle of vision, we note other possible kinds of consequences, this time for the communication system of science. The Matthew effect may serve to heighten the visibility of contributions to science by scientists of acknowledged standing and to reduce the visibility of contributions by authors who are less well known. We examine the psychosocial conditions and mechanisms underlying this effect and find a correlation between the redundancy function of multiple discoveries and the focalizing function of eminent men of science-a function which is reinforced by the great value these men place upon finding basic problems and by their self-assurance. This self-assurance, which is partly inherent, partly the result of experiences and associations in creative scientific environments, and partly a result of later social validation of their position, encourages them to search out risky but important problems and to highlight the results of their inquiry. A macrosocial version of the Matthew principle is apparently involved in those processes of social selection that currently lead to the concentration of scientific resources and talent (50).
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              The social psychology of creativity: A componential conceptualization.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Strategic Management Journal
                Strat. Mgmt. J.
                Wiley-Blackwell
                01432095
                October 2015
                October 2015
                : 36
                : 10
                : 1435-1457
                Article
                10.1002/smj.2294
                3c9f5877-b4e3-463a-a42b-7d8cd1fa6dfd
                © 2015

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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