Literature DB >> 22897077

Academic workload, research productivity, and end of life: a single-case historiometric study.

Ingo W Nader1, Jakob Pietschnig, Martin Voracek.   

Abstract

Fourteen years of biographical time-series data were analyzed quantitatively retrospectively using the historiometric approach. The data were descriptions of self-recorded daily working hours for one academic researcher's career and life. The researcher's unexpected death was preceded by a notable decline in daily working hours and conference travels commencing two years before. Well-known calendar effects (week and academic year) as well as effects of increased academic rank and duties on working hours were all discernible in these unobtrusive data. However, effort (total working hours) did not predict concurrent or near-future research output, even when teaching load was controlled for.

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22897077     DOI: 10.2466/02.10.11.17.PR0.110.3.701-708

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Rep        ISSN: 0033-2941


  1 in total

1.  Standing on the shoulders of Pinel, Freud, and Kraepelin: a historiometric inquiry into the histories of psychiatry.

Authors:  Erick Messias
Journal:  J Nerv Ment Dis       Date:  2014-11       Impact factor: 2.254

  1 in total

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