The real relationship between your age and your chance of success | Albert-László Barabási

282,224 views

2019-09-03 ・ TED


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The real relationship between your age and your chance of success | Albert-László Barabási

282,224 views ・ 2019-09-03

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
Today, actually, is a very special day for me,
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because it is my birthday.
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(Applause)
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And so, thanks to all of you for joining the party.
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(Laughter)
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But every time you throw a party, there's someone there to spoil it. Right?
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(Laughter)
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And I'm a physicist,
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and this time I brought another physicist along to do so.
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His name is Albert Einstein -- also Albert -- and he's the one who said
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that the person who has not made his great contributions to science
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by the age of 30
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will never do so.
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(Laughter)
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Now, you don't need to check Wikipedia
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that I'm beyond 30.
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(Laughter)
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So, effectively, what he is telling me, and us,
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is that when it comes to my science,
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I'm deadwood.
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Well, luckily, I had my share of luck within my career.
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Around age 28, I became very interested in networks,
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and a few years later, we managed to publish a few key papers
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that reported the discovery of scale-free networks
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and really gave birth to a new discipline that we call network science today.
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And if you really care about it, you can get a PhD now in network science
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in Budapest, in Boston,
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and you can study it all over the world.
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A few years later,
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when I moved to Harvard first as a sabbatical,
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I became interested in another type of network:
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that time, the networks within ourselves,
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how the genes and the proteins and the metabolites link to each other
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and how they connect to disease.
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And that interest led to a major explosion within medicine,
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including the Network Medicine Division at Harvard,
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that has more than 300 researchers who are using this perspective
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to treat patients and develop new cures.
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And a few years ago,
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I thought that I would take this idea of networks
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and the expertise we had in networks
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in a different area,
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that is, to understand success.
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And why did we do that?
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Well, we thought that, to some degree,
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our success is determined by the networks we're part of --
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that our networks can push us forward, they can pull us back.
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And I was curious if we could use the knowledge and big data and expertise
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where we develop the networks
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to really quantify how these things happen.
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This is a result from that.
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What you see here is a network of galleries in museums
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that connect to each other.
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And through this map that we mapped out last year,
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we are able to predict very accurately the success of an artist
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if you give me the first five exhibits that he or she had in their career.
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Well, as we thought about success,
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we realized that success is not only about networks;
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there are so many other dimensions to that.
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And one of the things we need for success, obviously,
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is performance.
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So let's define what's the difference between performance and success.
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Well, performance is what you do:
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how fast you run, what kind of paintings you paint,
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what kind of papers you publish.
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However, in our working definition,
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success is about what the community notices from what you did,
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from your performance:
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How does it acknowledge it, and how does it reward you for it?
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In other terms,
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your performance is about you, but your success is about all of us.
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And this was a very important shift for us,
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because the moment we defined success as being a collective measure
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that the community provides to us,
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it became measurable,
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because if it's in the community, there are multiple data points about that.
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So we go to school, we exercise, we practice,
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because we believe that performance leads to success.
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But the way we actually started to explore,
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we realized that performance and success are very, very different animals
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when it comes to the mathematics of the problem.
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And let me illustrate that.
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So what you see here is the fastest man on earth, Usain Bolt.
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And of course, he wins most of the competitions that he enters.
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And we know he's the fastest on earth because we have a chronometer
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to measure his speed.
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Well, what is interesting about him is that when he wins,
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he doesn't do so by really significantly outrunning his competition.
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He's running at most a percent faster than the one who loses the race.
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And not only does he run only one percent faster than the second one,
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but he doesn't run 10 times faster than I do --
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and I'm not a good runner, trust me on that.
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(Laughter)
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And every time we are able to measure performance,
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we notice something very interesting;
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that is, performance is bounded.
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What it means is that there are no huge variations in human performance.
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It varies only in a narrow range,
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and we do need the chronometer to measure the differences.
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This is not to say that we cannot see the good from the best ones,
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but the best ones are very hard to distinguish.
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And the problem with that is that most of us work in areas
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where we do not have a chronometer to gauge our performance.
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Alright, performance is bounded,
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there are no huge differences between us when it comes to our performance.
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How about success?
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Well, let's switch to a different topic, like books.
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One measure of success for writers is how many people read your work.
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And so when my previous book came out in 2009,
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I was in Europe talking with my editor,
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and I was interested: Who is the competition?
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And I had some fabulous ones.
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That week --
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(Laughter)
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Dan Brown came out with "The Lost Symbol,"
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and "The Last Song" also came out,
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Nicholas Sparks.
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And when you just look at the list,
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you realize, you know, performance-wise, there's hardly any difference
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between these books or mine.
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Right?
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So maybe if Nicholas Sparks's team works a little harder,
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he could easily be number one,
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because it's almost by accident who ended up at the top.
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So I said, let's look at the numbers -- I'm a data person, right?
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So let's see what were the sales for Nicholas Sparks.
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And it turns out that that opening weekend,
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Nicholas Sparks sold more than a hundred thousand copies,
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which is an amazing number.
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You can actually get to the top of the "New York Times" best-seller list
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by selling 10,000 copies a week,
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so he tenfold overcame what he needed to be number one.
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Yet he wasn't number one.
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Why?
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Because there was Dan Brown, who sold 1.2 million copies that weekend.
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(Laughter)
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And the reason I like this number is because it shows that, really,
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when it comes to success, it's unbounded,
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that the best doesn't only get slightly more than the second best
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but gets orders of magnitude more,
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because success is a collective measure.
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We give it to them, rather than we earn it through our performance.
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So one of things we realized is that performance, what we do, is bounded,
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but success, which is collective, is unbounded,
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which makes you wonder:
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How do you get these huge differences in success
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when you have such tiny differences in performance?
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And recently, I published a book that I devoted to that very question.
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And they didn't give me enough time to go over all of that,
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so I'm going to go back to the question of,
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alright, you have success; when should that appear?
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So let's go back to the party spoiler and ask ourselves:
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Why did Einstein make this ridiculous statement,
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that only before 30 you could actually be creative?
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Well, because he looked around himself and he saw all these fabulous physicists
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that created quantum mechanics and modern physics,
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and they were all in their 20s and early 30s when they did so.
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And it's not only him.
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It's not only observational bias,
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because there's actually a whole field of genius research
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that has documented the fact that,
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if we look at the people we admire from the past
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and then look at what age they made their biggest contribution,
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whether that's music, whether that's science,
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whether that's engineering,
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most of them tend to do so in their 20s, 30s, early 40s at most.
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But there's a problem with this genius research.
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Well, first of all, it created the impression to us
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that creativity equals youth,
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which is painful, right?
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(Laughter)
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And it also has an observational bias,
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because it only looks at geniuses and doesn't look at ordinary scientists
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and doesn't look at all of us and ask,
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is it really true that creativity vanishes as we age?
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So that's exactly what we tried to do,
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and this is important for that to actually have references.
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So let's look at an ordinary scientist like myself,
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and let's look at my career.
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So what you see here is all the papers that I've published
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from my very first paper, in 1989; I was still in Romania when I did so,
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till kind of this year.
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And vertically, you see the impact of the paper,
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that is, how many citations,
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how many other papers have been written that cited that work.
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And when you look at that,
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you see that my career has roughly three different stages.
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I had the first 10 years where I had to work a lot
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and I don't achieve much.
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No one seems to care about what I do, right?
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There's hardly any impact.
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(Laughter)
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That time, I was doing material science,
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and then I kind of discovered for myself networks
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and then started publishing in networks.
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And that led from one high-impact paper to the other one.
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And it really felt good. That was that stage of my career.
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(Laughter)
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So the question is, what happens right now?
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And we don't know, because there hasn't been enough time passed yet
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to actually figure out how much impact those papers will get;
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it takes time to acquire.
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Well, when you look at the data,
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it seems to be that Einstein, the genius research, is right,
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and I'm at that stage of my career.
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(Laughter)
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So we said, OK, let's figure out how does this really happen,
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first in science.
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And in order not to have the selection bias,
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to look only at geniuses,
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we ended up reconstructing the career of every single scientist
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from 1900 till today
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and finding for all scientists what was their personal best,
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whether they got the Nobel Prize or they never did,
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or no one knows what they did, even their personal best.
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And that's what you see in this slide.
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Each line is a career,
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and when you have a light blue dot on the top of that career,
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it says that was their personal best.
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And the question is,
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when did they actually make their biggest discovery?
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To quantify that,
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we look at what's the probability that you make your biggest discovery,
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let's say, one, two, three or 10 years into your career?
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We're not looking at real age.
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We're looking at what we call "academic age."
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Your academic age starts when you publish your first papers.
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I know some of you are still babies.
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(Laughter)
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So let's look at the probability
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that you publish your highest-impact paper.
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And what you see is, indeed, the genius research is right.
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Most scientists tend to publish their highest-impact paper
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in the first 10, 15 years in their career,
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and it tanks after that.
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It tanks so fast that I'm about -- I'm exactly 30 years into my career,
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and the chance that I will publish a paper that would have a higher impact
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than anything that I did before
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is less than one percent.
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I am in that stage of my career, according to this data.
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But there's a problem with that.
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We're not doing controls properly.
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So the control would be,
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what would a scientist look like who makes random contribution to science?
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Or what is the productivity of the scientist?
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When do they write papers?
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So we measured the productivity,
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and amazingly, the productivity,
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your likelihood of writing a paper in year one, 10 or 20 in your career,
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is indistinguishable from the likelihood of having the impact
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in that part of your career.
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And to make a long story short,
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after lots of statistical tests, there's only one explanation for that,
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that really, the way we scientists work
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is that every single paper we write, every project we do,
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has exactly the same chance of being our personal best.
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That is, discovery is like a lottery ticket.
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And the more lottery tickets we buy,
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the higher our chances.
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And it happens to be so
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that most scientists buy most of their lottery tickets
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in the first 10, 15 years of their career,
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and after that, their productivity decreases.
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They're not buying any more lottery tickets.
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So it looks as if they would not be creative.
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In reality, they stopped trying.
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So when we actually put the data together, the conclusion is very simple:
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success can come at any time.
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It could be your very first or very last paper of your career.
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It's totally random in the space of the projects.
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It is the productivity that changes.
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Let me illustrate that.
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Here is Frank Wilczek, who got the Nobel Prize in Physics
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for the very first paper he ever wrote in his career as a graduate student.
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(Laughter)
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More interesting is John Fenn,
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who, at age 70, was forcefully retired by Yale University.
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They shut his lab down,
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and at that moment, he moved to Virginia Commonwealth University,
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opened another lab,
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and it is there, at age 72, that he published a paper
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for which, 15 years later, he got the Nobel Prize for Chemistry.
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And you think, OK, well, science is special,
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but what about other areas where we need to be creative?
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So let me take another typical example: entrepreneurship.
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Silicon Valley,
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the land of the youth, right?
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And indeed, when you look at it,
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you realize that the biggest awards, the TechCrunch Awards and other awards,
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are all going to people
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whose average age is late 20s, very early 30s.
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You look at who the VCs give the money to, some of the biggest VC firms --
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all people in their early 30s.
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Which, of course, we know;
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there is this ethos in Silicon Valley that youth equals success.
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Not when you look at the data,
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because it's not only about forming a company --
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forming a company is like productivity, trying, trying, trying --
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when you look at which of these individuals actually put out
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a successful company, a successful exit.
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And recently, some of our colleagues looked at exactly that question.
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And it turns out that yes, those in the 20s and 30s
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put out a huge number of companies, form lots of companies,
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but most of them go bust.
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And when you look at the successful exits, what you see in this particular plot,
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the older you are, the more likely that you will actually hit the stock market
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or the sell the company successfully.
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This is so strong, actually, that if you are in the 50s,
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you are twice as likely to actually have a successful exit
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than if you are in your 30s.
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(Applause)
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So in the end, what is it that we see, actually?
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What we see is that creativity has no age.
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Productivity does, right?
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Which is telling me that at the end of the day,
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if you keep trying --
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(Laughter)
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you could still succeed and succeed over and over.
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So my conclusion is very simple:
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I am off the stage, back in my lab.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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