首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Science of setbacks : How failure can improve career prospects A) How do early career setbacks affect our long-term success? Fai
Science of setbacks : How failure can improve career prospects A) How do early career setbacks affect our long-term success? Fai
admin
2021-08-17
0
问题
Science of setbacks : How failure can improve career prospects
A) How do early career setbacks affect our long-term success? Failures can help us learn and overcome our fears. But disasters can still wound us. They can screw us up and set us back. Wouldn’t it be nice if there was genuine, scientifically documented truth to the expression "what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger" ?
B) One way social scientists have probed the effects of career setbacks is to look at scientists of very similar qualifications. These scientists, for reasons that are mostly arbitrary, either just missed getting a research grant or just barely made it. In social sciences, this is known as examining "near misses" and "narrow wins" in areas where merit is subjective. That allows researchers to measure only the effects of being chosen or not. Studies in this area have found conflicting results. In the competitive game of biomedical science, research has been done on scientists who narrowly lost or won grant money. It suggests that narrow winners become even bigger winners down the line. In other words, the rich get richer.
C) A 2018 study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, for example, followed researchers in the Netherlands. Researchers concluded that those who just barely qualified for a grant were able to get twice as much money within the next eight years as those who just missed out. And the narrow winners were 50 percent more likely to be given a professorship.
D) Others in the US have found similar effects with National Institutes of Health early-career fellowships launching narrow winners far ahead of close losers. The phenomenon is often referred to as the Matthew effect, inspired by the Bible’s wisdom that to those who have, more will be given. There’s a good explanation for the phenomenon in the book The Formula: The Universal Laws of Success by Albert Laszlo Barabasi. According to Barabasi, it’s easier and less risky for those in positions of power to choose to hand awards and funding to those who’ve already been so recognized.
E) This is bad news for the losers. Small early career setbacks seem to have a disproportionate effect down the line. What didn’t kill them made them weaker. But other studies using the same technique have shown there’s sometimes no penalty to a near miss. Students who just miss getting into top high schools or universities do just as well later in life as those who just manage to get accepted. In this case, what didn’t kill them simply didn’t matter. So is there any evidence that setbacks might actually improve our career prospects? There is now.
F) In a study published in Nature Communications, Northwestern University sociologist Dashun Wang tracked more than 1,100 scientists who were on the border between getting a grant and missing out between 1990 and 2005. He followed various measures of performance over the next decade. These included how many papers they authored and how influential those papers were, as measured by the number of subsequent citations. As expected, there was a much higher rate of attrition (减员) among scientists who didn’t get grants. But among those who stayed on, the close losers performed even better than the narrow winners. To make sure this wasn’t by chance, Wang conducted additional tests using different performance measures. He examined how many times people were first authors on influential studies, and the like.
G) One straightforward reason close losers might outperform narrow winners is that the two groups have comparable ability. In Wang’s study, he selected the most determined, passionate scientists from the loser group and culled (剔除) what he deemed the weakest members of the winner group. Yet the persevering losers still came out on top. He thinks that being a close loser might give people a psychological boost, or the proverbial kick in the pants.
H) Utrecht University sociologist Arnout van de Rijt was the lead author on the 2018 paper showing the rich get richer. He said the new finding is apparently reasonable and worth some attention. His own work showed that although the narrow winners did get much more money in the near future, the actual performance of the close losers was just as good.
I) He said the people who should be paying regard to the Wang paper are the funding agents who distribute government grant money. After all, by continuing to pile riches on the narrow winners, the taxpayers are not getting the maximum bang for their buck if the close losers are performing just as well or even better. There’s a huge amount of time and effort that goes into the process of selecting who gets grants, he said, and the latest research shows that the scientific establishment is not very good at distributing money. "Maybe we should spend less money trying to figure out who is better than who,"he said, suggesting that some more equal dividing up of money might be more productive and more efficient. Van de Rijt said he’s not convinced that losing out gives people a psychological boost. It may yet be a selection effect. Even though Wang tried to account for this by culling the weakest winners, it’s impossible to know which of the winners would have quit had they found themselves on the losing side.
J) For his part, Wang said that in his own experience, losing did light a motivating fire. He recalled a recent paper he submitted to a journal, which accepted it only to request extensive editing, and then reversed course and rejected it. He submitted the unedited version to a more respected journal and got accepted.
K) In sports and many areas of life, we think of failures as evidence of something we could have done better. We regard these disappointments as a fate we could have avoided with more careful preparation, different training, a better strategy, or more focus. And there it makes sense that failures show us the road to success. These papers deal with a kind of failure people have little control over—rejection. Others determine who wins and who loses. But at the very least, the research is starting to show that early setbacks don’t have to be fatal. They might even make us better at our jobs. Getting paid like a winner, though? That’s a different matter.
Being a close loser could greatly motivate one to persevere in their research.
选项
答案
G
解析
倒数第一句提到,作为一个略输者可能会给人们带来心理上的激励,或俗话所说的一种有激励效果的意外挫折。题干中的motivate对应原文中的give people a psychological boost,题干中的persevere in their research对应原文中的persevering losers,故答案为G)。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/zKK7777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
Manyofthepeoplewhoappearmostoftenandmostgloriouslyinhistorybooksaregreatconquerorsandgeneralsandsoldiers,wh
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayonthefollowingquestion.Youshouldwriteatleast120words
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayonthetopicofPostingPhotosonSocialMedia.Youshouldwrit
Someyearsago,anAmericanpolicemanfoundawomanlyingnearalonelyroad.Shedidnot【B1】______havehadanaccident.Butsh
Splittingdinnercheckscancauseasplittingheadache,evenwhenthedinersaremathematicsmajors.Threecomputerscience【B1】_
TheRiseoftheSharingEconomyA)Lastnight40,000peoplerentedaccommodationfromaservicethatoffers250,000roomsin30,0
徐霞客出生在一个富庶之家。受父亲影响,他喜爱读地理、探险和游记之类的书籍。这些书籍使他从小就热爱祖国的壮丽河山,立志要遍游名山大川。22岁时徐霞客开始外出旅游。徐霞客一生游历中国30多年,广泛记录了自己的旅行。为了进行细致的考察,他很少乘车坐船,几乎全靠双
Whyyoushouldn’ttrytobeamorningpersonA)We’veallhearditbefore:tobesuccessful,getoutofbedearly.Afterall,
A、Improvethemathsskillsofhighschoolteachers.B、ChangeBritishpeople’snegativeviewofmaths.C、HelpBritishpeopleund
A、Itismorelikeamessageboardnow.B、Itisusedbymillionsofpeople.C、Thefounderhasgivenitupforyears.D、Thereisn
随机试题
下列选项中,概念划分错误的有()。
α1-微球蛋白
患者男性,38岁。反复咳嗽、咳黄脓痰,间断小口咯血8年,痰量多,常大约100ml/d,伴有鼻塞、黄涕、头晕。近3d咳嗽,咳黄脓痰和血痰,痰量大增,伴发热,体温39.5℃,气促明显。1h前突然大咯血,鲜血从口鼻涌出。该患者引起大咯血的原因最可能为
对专业设计方案审核的目的在于设计()。
下列关于资产流动性的说法,正确的有()。
促销活动实质上是一种沟通活动()。
英国《经济学家》日前评出全球“最适合生活的城市”。调查结果显示,大多数有吸引力的城市在欧洲、北美洲和大洋洲。加拿大的温哥华市名列第一,总分1分,报告认为它在维护个人免受犯罪伤害方面还有一点瑕疵,所以无法取得零分的最优成绩。由这段话我们可知:
“历史不过是追求着自己目的的人的活动而已”,这一观点表明()。
不计算积分,比较下列各组积分值的大小:
Underthedifficultfinancialsituation,Americans______.
最新回复
(
0
)