Project selection by funding bodies directly influences the division of cognitive labour in scientific communities. I present a novel adaptation of an existing agent-based model of scientific research, in which a central funding body selects from proposed projects located on an epistemic landscape. I simulate four different selection strategies: selection based on a god's-eye perspective of project significance, selection based on past success, selection based on past funding, and random selection. Results show the size of the landscape matters: on small landscapes historical information leads to slightly better results than random selection, but on large landscapes random selection greatly outperforms historically-informed selection
Since the publication of Kitcher’s influential paper The Division of Cognitive Labor, some philosoph...
Public funding agencies aim to fund novel breakthrough research to promote the radical scientific di...
This article examines two questions about scientists' search for knowledge. First, which search stra...
Project selection by funding bodies directly influences the division of cognitive labour in scientif...
Computer simulation of an epistemic landscape model, modified to include explicit representation of ...
This paper provides an account of mid-level models, which calibrate highly theoretical agent-based m...
Because contemporary scientific research is conducted by groups of scientists, understanding scienti...
The question of the division of cognitive labor (DCL) has given rise to various models characterizin...
The way research is, and should be, funded by the public sphere is the subject of renewed interest ...
Over the past decades, science funding shows a shift from recurrent block funding towards project fu...
Scientists are not lone agents, cut off from the outside world, responding only to information gener...
This paper examines two questions about scientists’ search for knowledge. First, which search strate...
Since the publication of Kitcher’s influential paper The Division of Cognitive Labor, some philosoph...
Since the publication of Kitcher’s influential paper The Division of Cognitive Labor, some philosoph...
Public funding agencies aim to fund novel breakthrough research to promote the radical scientific di...
This article examines two questions about scientists' search for knowledge. First, which search stra...
Project selection by funding bodies directly influences the division of cognitive labour in scientif...
Computer simulation of an epistemic landscape model, modified to include explicit representation of ...
This paper provides an account of mid-level models, which calibrate highly theoretical agent-based m...
Because contemporary scientific research is conducted by groups of scientists, understanding scienti...
The question of the division of cognitive labor (DCL) has given rise to various models characterizin...
The way research is, and should be, funded by the public sphere is the subject of renewed interest ...
Over the past decades, science funding shows a shift from recurrent block funding towards project fu...
Scientists are not lone agents, cut off from the outside world, responding only to information gener...
This paper examines two questions about scientists’ search for knowledge. First, which search strate...
Since the publication of Kitcher’s influential paper The Division of Cognitive Labor, some philosoph...
Since the publication of Kitcher’s influential paper The Division of Cognitive Labor, some philosoph...
Public funding agencies aim to fund novel breakthrough research to promote the radical scientific di...
This article examines two questions about scientists' search for knowledge. First, which search stra...