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Productivity without merit: The hidden costs of academic inbreeding

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Resumo:This letter responds to Victoria Slepykh’s study on academic inbreeding and early-career productivity, acknowledging its empirical rigor while questioning its central methodological premise: the use of publication counts as the primary proxy for scientific productivity. Although such metrics are appealing for their clarity and comparability, they risk conflating quantity with quality and scientific impact, thereby obscuring the multiple and severe risks associated with academic inbreeding, particularly those affecting institutional integrity. The case of Portugal, where academic inbreeding rates approach 70%, is used to illustrate that high publication output can coexist with comparatively modest levels of international scientific distinction.
Autores principais:Pacheco-Torgal, F.
Assunto:Academic inbreeding research productivity publication counts research quality scientific impact
Ano:2026
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:outro
Tipo de acesso:acesso aberto
Instituição associada:Universidade do Minho
Idioma:inglês
Origem:RepositóriUM - Universidade do Minho
Descrição
Resumo:This letter responds to Victoria Slepykh’s study on academic inbreeding and early-career productivity, acknowledging its empirical rigor while questioning its central methodological premise: the use of publication counts as the primary proxy for scientific productivity. Although such metrics are appealing for their clarity and comparability, they risk conflating quantity with quality and scientific impact, thereby obscuring the multiple and severe risks associated with academic inbreeding, particularly those affecting institutional integrity. The case of Portugal, where academic inbreeding rates approach 70%, is used to illustrate that high publication output can coexist with comparatively modest levels of international scientific distinction.