TY - JOUR
T1 - Organizational design of University laboratories
T2 - Task allocation and lab performance in Japanese bioscience laboratories
AU - Shibayama, Sotaro
AU - Baba, Yasunori
AU - Walsh, John P.
PY - 2015/4
Y1 - 2015/4
N2 - A university laboratory is a fundamental unit of scientific production, but optimizing its organizational design is a formidable task for lab heads, who play potentially conflicting roles of manager, educator, and researcher. Drawing on cross-sectional data from a questionnaire survey and bibliometric data on Japanese biology professors, this study investigates task allocation inside laboratories. Results show a general pattern that lab heads play managerial roles and members (e.g., students) are engaged in labor-intensive tasks (e.g., experiment), while revealing a substantial variation among laboratories. Further examining how this variation is related to lab-level scientific productivity, this study finds that productive task allocation differs by context. In particular, results suggest that significant task overlap across status hierarchies is more productive for basic research, and that rigidly separated task allocation is more productive in applied research. However, optimal task allocation, with regard to scientific productivity, might conflict with other goals of academic organizations, particularly training of future scientists. The paper concludes with a discussion of the policy implications of these findings.
AB - A university laboratory is a fundamental unit of scientific production, but optimizing its organizational design is a formidable task for lab heads, who play potentially conflicting roles of manager, educator, and researcher. Drawing on cross-sectional data from a questionnaire survey and bibliometric data on Japanese biology professors, this study investigates task allocation inside laboratories. Results show a general pattern that lab heads play managerial roles and members (e.g., students) are engaged in labor-intensive tasks (e.g., experiment), while revealing a substantial variation among laboratories. Further examining how this variation is related to lab-level scientific productivity, this study finds that productive task allocation differs by context. In particular, results suggest that significant task overlap across status hierarchies is more productive for basic research, and that rigidly separated task allocation is more productive in applied research. However, optimal task allocation, with regard to scientific productivity, might conflict with other goals of academic organizations, particularly training of future scientists. The paper concludes with a discussion of the policy implications of these findings.
KW - biology
KW - laboratory
KW - organizational design
KW - scientific productivity
KW - task allocation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84923169607&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.respol.2014.12.003
DO - 10.1016/j.respol.2014.12.003
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84923169607
SN - 0048-7333
VL - 44
SP - 610
EP - 622
JO - Research Policy
JF - Research Policy
IS - 3
ER -