Researchers who pivot to unfamiliar domains produce less impactful work in the short term — the "pivot penalty." Yet existing research treats the destination of a pivot as irrelevant, focusing on the distance of the move rather than where the researcher lands. Whether pivoting into a topic in its different life cycles has different effects remains an open question with competing theoretical predictions. Using 2.5 million biology papers published between 1980 and 2020, drawn from OpenAlex and Dimensions, we develop a population ecology framework that tracks the birth and death of researchers within 1,265 scientific concepts. We show that lifecycle stage alone does not meaningfully moderate the steepness of the pivot penalty. However, the character of a concept's growth trajectory strongly affects the consequences of pivoting. Pivoters who enter during an outsider-driven growth phase — pioneers — face the mildest penalty and achieve the best outcomes among all pivoters. Pivoters who chase an insider-built concept after it has become popular — followers — face the steepest penalty, falling into a "hot topic trap." These findings show that the costs of exploration are not fixed but depend critically on where and when researchers pivot, highlighting the role of community composition and growth dynamics in shaping scientific returns.
Yingrong Mao (Mon,) studied this question.
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