Citation Penalties Following Sexual Misconduct versus Scientific Fraud Allegations

Seminars - Brown Bag Series
Speakers
GIULIA MAIMONE, UCLA Anderson School of Management
13:00 - 14:30
Alberto Alesina Seminar Room 5-E4-SR04, 5th floor, via Roentgen 1
SASTRY

Abstract

Citations in academia have long been regarded as a fundamental means of acknowledging the contribution of past work and promoting scientific advancement. However, our analysis of data encompassing 31,941 publications across 18 diverse academic disciplines reveals that citations may also serve as a currency to reward and punish scientists’ morality. In particular, we find that the citation rates of scholars accused of sexual misconduct decrease in the three years after the accusations become public, while we do not find a significant citation penalty in the same time frame for scholars accused of scientific fraud. These findings add a new dimension to a body of research showing that citation decisions are sensitive to factors unrelated to a publication's scientific merit.

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