Recombinant Innovation, Novel Ideas, and the Start of Nobel Prize-Winning Work
We draw on a recombinant view of innovation, where being in a new location and/or multiple locations leads to exposure to novel combinations of ideas that increase the creativity of top scientists. Using a rich, unique dataset we helped assemble, we estimate the empirical relationship between being in a new location and/or multiple locations and the expected interval before an eventual Nobel laureate (ENL) commences their prize-winning work. We find that being in a new location and in multiple locations are substantially and significantly associated with a shorter expected interval before ENLs commence their prize-winning work.
Published Versions
John C. Ham & Brian Quistorff & Bruce A. Weinberg, 2025. "Recombinant Innovation, Novel Ideas, and the Start of Nobel Prize–Winning Work," International Economic Review, vol 66(2), pages 965-979.