iGEM: a model system for team science and innovation
iGEM: a model system for team science and innovation
Teams are a primary source of innovation in science and technology. Rather than examining the lone genius, scholarly and policy attention has shifted to understanding how team interactions produce new and useful ideas. Yet the organizational roots of innovation remain unclear, in part because of the limitations of current data. This paper introduces the international Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) competition, a model system for studying team science and innovation. By combining digital laboratory notebooks with performance data from 2,406 teams over multiple years of participation, we reveal shared dynamical and organizational patterns across teams and identify features associated with team performance and success. This dataset makes visible organizational behavior that is typically hidden, and thus understudied, creating new opportunities for the science of science and innovation.
Albert-Laszlo Barabasi、Kathryn R. Brink、Robert N. Ward、Abhijeet Krishna、Marc Santolini、Megan J. Palmer、Leo Blondel、Rathin Jeyaram
自然科学研究方法生物工程学自然科学机构、自然科学团体、自然科学会议
Albert-Laszlo Barabasi,Kathryn R. Brink,Robert N. Ward,Abhijeet Krishna,Marc Santolini,Megan J. Palmer,Leo Blondel,Rathin Jeyaram.iGEM: a model system for team science and innovation[EB/OL].(2023-10-30)[2025-05-24].https://arxiv.org/abs/2310.19858.点此复制
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