Hot streaks in artistic, cultural, and scientific careers

Lu Liu, Yang Wang, Roberta Sinatra, C. Lee Giles, Chaoming Song, Dashun Wang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

129 Scopus citations

Abstract

The hot streak - loosely defined as 'winning begets more winnings' - highlights a specific period during which an individual's performance is substantially better than his or her typical performance. Although hot streaks have been widely debated in sports 1,2, gambling 3-5 and financial markets 6,7 over the past several decades, little is known about whether they apply to individual careers. Here, building on rich literature on the lifecycle of creativity 8-22, we collected large-scale career histories of individual artists, film directors and scientists, tracing the artworks, films and scientific publications they produced. We find that, across all three domains, hit works within a career show a high degree of temporal regularity, with each career being characterized by bursts of high-impact works occurring in sequence. We demonstrate that these observations can be explained by a simple hot-streak model, allowing us to probe quantitatively the hot streak phenomenon governing individual careers. We find this phenomemon to be remarkably universal across diverse domains: hot streaks are ubiquitous yet usually unique across different careers. The hot streak emerges randomly within an individual's sequence of works, is temporally localized, and is not associated with any detectable change in productivity. We show that, because works produced during hot streaks garner substantially more impact, the uncovered hot streaks fundamentally drive the collective impact of an individual, and ignoring this leads us to systematically overestimate or underestimate the future impact of a career. These results not only deepen our quantitative understanding of patterns that govern individual ingenuity and success, but also may have implications for identifying and nurturing individuals whose work will have lasting impact.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)396-399
Number of pages4
JournalNature
Volume559
Issue number7714
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 19 2018

Funding

Acknowledgements We thank A.-L. Barabasi, R. Burt, J. Chown, J. Evans, C. Jin, L. Nordgren, W. Ocasio, B. Uzzi, Y. Yin, the Kellogg Insights and all members of NICO for invaluable comments. This work is supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR) under award number FA9550-15-1-0162 and FA9550-17-1-0089, and Northwestern University’s Data Science Initiative. R.S. acknowledges support from AFOSR grant FA9550-15-1-0364 and from the Central European University Intellectual Themes Initiative ‘Just Data’.

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General

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