V. Plerou et al., Similarities between the growth dynamics of university research and of competitive economic activities, NATURE, 400(6743), 1999, pp. 433-437
Quantifying the dynamics of research activities is of considerable current
interest, not least because of recent changes in research and development (
R&D) funding(1-9). Here we quantify and analyse university research activit
ies, and compare their growth dynamics with those of business firms(10-14).
Our study involves the analysis of five distinct databases, the largest of
which is a National Science Foundation database of the R&D expenditures in
science and engineering for a 17-year period (1979-95) in 719 United State
s universities. We find that the distribution of growth rates displays a 'u
niversal' form that does not depend on the size of the university or on the
measure of size used; and the width of this distribution decays with size
as a power law. These findings are quantitatively similar to those of busin
ess firms 10(-14), and so are consistent with the hypothesis that the growt
h dynamics of complex organizations are governed by universal mechanisms. O
ne possible explanation for these similarities is that the combination of p
eer review and government direction leads to an outcome similar to that ind
uced by market forces (where the analogues of peer review and government di
rection are, respectively, consumer evaluation and product regulation).