Albert-László Barabási: The real relationship between your age and your chance of success
阿尔伯特·拉兹洛·巴拉巴斯: 年纪和成功几率的真正联系
A pioneer in network science, Albert-László Barabási uncovers the hidden order behind complex systems. Full bio
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a very special day for me,
for joining the party.
there's someone there to spoil it. Right?
总是有人捣蛋,对吧?
another physicist along to do so.
also Albert -- and he's the one who said
也叫阿尔伯特——他是那个说过
his great contributions to science
he is telling me, and us,
of luck within my career.
very interested in networks,
to publish a few key papers
of scale-free networks
that we call network science today.
网络科学的新学科。
you can get a PhD now in network science
可以在布达佩斯,在波士顿
first as a sabbatical,
in another type of network:
and the metabolites link to each other
to a major explosion within medicine,
医学领域的一阵轰动,
Division at Harvard,
who are using this perspective
基于这个想法来治疗病人,
this idea of networks
by the networks we're part of --
they can pull us back.
也能拖我们后腿。
the knowledge and big data and expertise
在网络中获得的这些知识,
how these things happen.
of galleries in museums
that we mapped out last year,
the success of an artist
职业生涯举办的前五个展览,
that he or she had in their career.
一个艺术家是否成功。
is not only about networks;
other dimensions to that.
we need for success, obviously,
between performance and success.
what kind of paintings you paint,
notices from what you did,
and how does it reward you for it?
but your success is about all of us.
但你的成功跟大家都有关。
important shift for us,
as being a collective measure
there are multiple data points about that.
关于成功包含着很多数据点。
we exercise, we practice,
that performance leads to success.
started to explore,
are very, very different animals
以数学的方式看待这个问题时,
the mathematics of the problem.
非常不同的概念,
the fastest man on earth, Usain Bolt.
最快的人,尤塞恩·博尔特。
the competitions that he enters.
because we have a chronometer
因为我们有精密的计时器
is that when he wins,
outrunning his competition.
than the one who loses the race.
最多快百分之一。
one percent faster than the second one,
10 times faster than I do --
trust me on that.
这点请相信我。
to measure performance,
no huge variations in human performance.
并没有巨大的差异。
to measure the differences.
来测量这个差异。
see the good from the best ones,
最好的人身上看到好的一面,
are very hard to distinguish.
is that most of us work in areas
to gauge our performance.
来衡量我们的业绩。
when it comes to our performance.
我们之间并没有显著的差异。
a different topic, like books.
how many people read your work.
有多少人阅读了你的作品。
came out in 2009,
在2009年出版时,
Who is the competition?
there's hardly any difference
works a little harder,
的团队再努力一点,
who ended up at the top.
几乎是随机的。
I'm a data person, right?
我就是干这行的,对吧?
the sales for Nicholas Sparks.
的作品销量。
that opening weekend,
a hundred thousand copies,
卖出了10万多本书,
of the "New York Times" best-seller list
每周销量在1万册以上的
what he needed to be number one.
十分之一就能轻松登上榜首。
who sold 1.2 million copies that weekend.
那个周末卖出了120万册。
is because it shows that, really,
是因为它真正显示了,
slightly more than the second best
we earn it through our performance.
通过我们的业绩获得它。
performance, what we do, is bounded,
collective, is unbounded,
huge differences in success
differences in performance?
that I devoted to that very question.
关于这个问题的书。
to go over all of that,
to the question of,
when should that appear?
and ask ourselves:
的话题,问问我们自己:
this ridiculous statement,
这样荒谬的言论,
you could actually be creative?
and he saw all these fabulous physicists
所有这些创造量子力学
and modern physics,
and early 30s when they did so.
20多岁和30岁出头。
a whole field of genius research
领域的天才研究
we admire from the past
they made their biggest contribution,
最大贡献的年纪,
whether that's science,
in their 20s, 30s, early 40s at most.
最多40岁出头时做出了这些成绩。
with this genius research.
the impression to us
and doesn't look at ordinary scientists
并没研究普通科学家,
vanishes as we age?
创造力真的会消失吗?
to actually have references.
scientist like myself,
这样平凡科学家
that I've published
I was still in Romania when I did so,
当时我还在罗马尼亚,
the impact of the paper,
have been written that cited that work.
引用了我的工作。
has roughly three different stages.
where I had to work a lot
about what I do, right?
for myself networks
paper to the other one.
我发表了一篇又一篇。
That was that stage of my career.
我职业生涯的高光时刻。
what happens right now?
hasn't been enough time passed yet
计算出这些论文
those papers will get;
天才研究的结论是对的,
the genius research, is right,
how does this really happen,
这究竟是如何发生的,
the selection bias,
of every single scientist
what was their personal best,
的个人最高成就,
or they never did,
even their personal best.
on the top of that career,
有一个浅蓝色的点,
their biggest discovery?
发生在什么时候?
最大发现的概率是多少,
that you make your biggest discovery,
or 10 years into your career?
的第1,2,3或者10年。
what we call "academic age."
你发表第一篇论文的时候。
when you publish your first papers.
your highest-impact paper.
the genius research is right.
天才研究的结论是正确的。
their highest-impact paper
影响力最高的论文倾向于
前10到15年,
I'm exactly 30 years into my career,
正处在我职业的第30个年头,
that would have a higher impact
更高影响力的论文
according to this data.
职业生涯的这个阶段。
who makes random contribution to science?
科学家会是什么样子?
of the scientist?
in year one, 10 or 20 in your career,
或第20年写论文的概率,
of having the impact
there's only one explanation for that,
只有一个解释,
every project we do,
of being our personal best.
我们个人的最佳成果。
a lottery ticket.
most of their lottery tickets
职业生涯的头10年,
their productivity decreases.
any more lottery tickets.
they would not be creative.
the conclusion is very simple:
结论非常简单:
or very last paper of your career.
最早或最后的论文。
in the space of the projects.
who got the Nobel Prize in Physics
的弗兰克·威尔切克,
in his career as a graduate student.
写的第一篇论文。
by Yale University.
to Virginia Commonwealth University,
that he published a paper
他发表了一篇论文,
the Nobel Prize for Chemistry.
获得了诺贝尔化学奖。
well, science is special,
where we need to be creative?
typical example: entrepreneurship.
另一个典型的例子:创业。
TechCrunch Awards或其他奖励,
the TechCrunch Awards and other awards,
is late 20s, very early 30s.
some of the biggest VC firms --
一些最大的VC企业——
that youth equals success.
年轻等于成功。
就不会这样认为了。
about forming a company --
trying, trying, trying --
of these individuals actually put out
尝试,尝试,再尝试。
looked at exactly that question.
正好研究了这个问题。
those in the 20s and 30s
在20多岁和30多岁的人
form lots of companies,
what you see in this particular plot,
你在这个图中可以看到,
you will actually hit the stock market
轰动股票市场
that if you are in the 50s,
如果你50多岁,
to actually have a successful exit
that we see, actually?
at the end of the day,
and succeed over and over.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Albert-László Barabási - Network scientistA pioneer in network science, Albert-László Barabási uncovers the hidden order behind complex systems.
Why you should listen
Albert-László Barabási is fascinated by a wide range of topics, from the structure of the brain and treating diseases with network medicine to the emergence of success in art and how science really works. His work uses the quantitative tools of network science, a research field that he pioneered, and led to the discovery of scale-free networks, helping explain the emergence of many natural, technological and social networks.
Barabási is the Robert Gray Dodge Professor of Network Science at Northeastern University and holds an appointment in the Department of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. He splits his time with Budapest, where he runs a European Research Council project at Central European University. A Hungarian born native of Transylvania, Romania, he received his masters in theoretical physics at the Eötvös University in Budapest, Hungary and his PhD three years later at Boston University.
Barabási’s latest book is The Formula: The Universal Laws of Success. He is also the author of Network Science, Linked and Bursts. He co-edited Network Medicine and The Structure and Dynamics of Networks. His books have been translated into over twenty languages.
Albert-László Barabási | Speaker | TED.com