The Role of Prizes In Innovation 87
Carl Bialik from WSJ writes "The Wall Street Journal's David Wessel assesses the impact on innovation of the increasing number of prizes, such as the X Prize, that reward solvers of intractable problems. From the column: 'Prizes prompt a lot of effort, far more than any sponsor could devote itself, but they generally pay only for success. That's "an important piece of shifting risk from inside the walls of the company and moving it out to the solver community," says Jill Panetta, InnoCentive's chief scientific officer. Competitors for the $10 million prize for the space vehicle spent 10 times that amount trying to win it. Contests also are a mechanism to tap scientific knowledge that's widely dispersed geographically, and not always in obvious places. Since posting its algorithm bounty in October, Netflix has drawn 15,000 entrants from 126 countries. The leading team is from Budapest University of Technology and Economics.'"
Who cares about prizes? (Score:2, Insightful)
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- If a specific kind of problem has a real business application, having a contest will get you a pretty good solution much sooner (probably years sooner) than just waiting for the right academic guys to decide they feel like solving your problem. Having a standardized problem description, standardized software interfaces and file formats, and a forum for lots of different people worki
The pay enough, don't they? (Score:1)
If someone will work for the pay on offer, can you really say it is too cheap?
If you find a (good) surgeon willing to save your life for $20, would you decline?
Too me, this seems a very interesting alternative to patents. It certainly seems like the economic incentive is enough to drive innovation quite spectacularly. Of course, participating in one of these contests also give you (or your team) good PR. So if this kind of contest ever became common-place it would probably be necessary to up the prize su
It's mostly about exposure (Score:3, Insightful)
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However, such can be skewed by relative wealth and favoritism of exclusionary conduct. Factor out market and failures thereof, and you can get a better solution.
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Speaking of Offtopic... (Score:4, Funny)
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Haha. I'm here all week.
Try the veal.
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If you present a low prize, it has really great v
For the Glory (Score:4, Interesting)
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Not to mention the fact that a million buckaroos would make even the most Bohemian/isolationist academic think "hmm...how could I put that kind of money to good use?"
Prizes are nice but what of losers? (Score:2, Insightful)
Also, circling is the vulture of impossibility
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On the contrary, a prize is offered to accomplish an impossible task [randi.org], can be of great educational value.
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"...an important piece of shifting risk from inside the walls of the company and moving it out to the solver community,"
So depleting the solver community is for the benefit of the "company", why didn't I guess that?
Everyone's in the same boat (Score:1)
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It is impossible to work long and hard on anything without learning a hell of a lot about the problem domain.
For example, in the first DARPA "Grand Challenge" to build an autonomous vehicle, all the contestants failed miserably. But, several of the failing teams did brilliantly the following year. Would they have done so well the second year without the knowledge gained through "failure" in the first?
Self limiting (Score:2, Insightful)
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Go Solar: http://mdsolar.blogspot.com/2007/01/slashdot-user
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My point, then, is that seeking after recognition is likely to limit your final level of accomplishment.
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Because this is part of the training, the habit of seeking recognition becomes pretty ingrained.
Human nature not training IMHO. But I suppose my comments don't negate your point. But since most people have motivations that aren't completely "inner", then there's good reason to consider providing such motivation for things we can clearly see a need for, like cheap(er) access to space or improving human health and longevity.Re: (Score:2)
For myself, I like the horse race aspect of those prize competitions. And, I think that competition can bring out more in people than they thought they could do, as well. I just don't think it always can bring out everything they can do. That is the limiting aspect: the goal, however lofty, is still a cutoff of achievement.
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This tag is not about solar power.
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Anyway, the main reason I posted way back when, was because I saw yet another, "prizes can't do everything" post. It's true, but I don't see any serious attempts, even in the original article, to make this claim. There are many flaws going solely with a prize based system. You miss the subtle results that you didn't anticipate would be important. It's not worth using a prize system for minor things (eg, the scientific equivalent of deciding what to wear at home), And prize systems don't help you make decisi
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So are you saying that having prizes would cause people to be burned at the stake like poor Mr. Bruno? Of course not. But I don't really understand the point of including his sad tale. It's not like we're seriously going to consider burning people at the stake for having scientific opinions. And I doubt you would claim that if we did so that this wouldn't cripple scientific research in any society which did so (ie, it's not going to prove that most scientists are more interested in persuing the sublime rath
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Science is *NOT* a contest, and reality cares not (Score:3, Insightful)
The days of the solitary inventor who could justify spending months or years pursuing a breakthrough and feel some sort of financial justification because of the expectation of winning a prize are long behind us. There might be some 'low-hanging fruit' still to be found, but not much of it, and if you knew where it was, it would make much more sense to just pick it rather than to offer a prize in hopes of motivating some gold seeker to find it. Major scientific breakthroughs now require serious investments, usually involve large numbers of people and long periods of time, and any profits are far downstream. You *NEED* to have that long-term perspective, not the motivation of a quick fix for a prize. Even the prize seekers admit they just want the publicity to help sell their results.
By the way, I actually work with researchers from a major lab. Some of them are even leaders in their fields, and have established track records of changing the world for the better far more than I ever will. Some of them have won prestigious awards and prizes, and I'm sure they'll win more in the future. However, it is very clear that they aren't motivated by prizes, and if they were, I'd take odds against them ever accomplishing much of anything.
Prizes are interesting for 'gold-hunting' pseudo-scientists, not for the actual hard working *REAL* scientists.
Re:Science is *NOT* a contest, and reality cares n (Score:5, Insightful)
Just wanted to point out a slight flaw in your idealistic view of science and academia. We'd all LIKE it to be that way, but perhaps you've heard of one other prize that motivates some of the most brilliant scientists in the world in many fields? People spend their whole careers trying to get this prize, not just for the money but for the validation. Say what you will, but very few scientists have shrugged off the Nobel Prize as the goal of "gold-hunting pseudo-scientists".
Finally, in theoretical computer science and mathematics, it IS still possible for one person or a very small group to come up with a breakthrough. The Poincare conjecture was recently solved largely due to the efforts of a single mathematician. There are other examples, but TCS/math are not as vastly invested in massive research groups as say, particle physics.
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How ironic, then, that he utterly shuns publicity and declined the Fields Medal. [wikipedia.org] Something other than prizes motivates Perelman.
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I never said the prize motivated Perelman. Thus the poster's comment was an implied rebuttal to my own. While his statement was ironic (as it claimed to be) -- and I have no problem with irony and even agree with his statement -- it was as a whole based on the premise that I had implied Perelman "did it for the prize".
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I repeat. Real science is *NOT* a contest.
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I repeat. Real science is *NOT* a contest (Score:3, Insightful)
I disagree. Pharmaceutical companies, chemical companies, food companies, are all using science and scientific experiments in a contest to make their product better than their competitors. Even scientists that work at Universities are always competing against one another. They compete for funding, resources, and in different universities, to see who can find a solution first.
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Re:Science is *NOT* a contest, and reality cares n (Score:2, Insightful)
http://thinkorthwim.com/2006/11/19/robotic-racing- winning-the-darpa-grand-challenge/ [thinkorthwim.com]
They could have spent $2 million dollars funding each team, which is the way they'd approached funding in the past. Instead they spent $2 million for ALL the teams efforts, and it worked. What a spectacular bargain.
Prizes are perfect if you have a specific goal that's almost achievable, but you
Re:Science is *NOT* a contest, and reality cares n (Score:3, Interesting)
Science is full of contests (you already mention awards and prizes, for example). They get instant recognition at least in their field for being the first to discover an important idea or discovery. Contests are a way to demonstrate to the whole world that something is important rather than the few dozen people who have some interest directly in your work. $10 million for the first fully privately funded organization to put someone into space in a reusable vehicle. That's a big statement about the importanc
Re:Science is *NOT* a contest, and reality cares n (Score:1)
And there are other reasons for very *REAL* scientists to try to win prizes. Winning prizes gains prestige for their institution, and prestige for their institution helps provide the resources they need (students, g
Open Source Similarities? (Score:2, Interesting)
Have corporations found a way to utilize this motivation in projects other than software? What role does the cash prize play in this if people are spending many times fold in attempting to win the spoils?
Proof of concept prizes (Score:3, Insightful)
Prizes can serve to bypass politics, bureaucracy (Score:1)
Still no fusion prize (Score:3, Insightful)
More recently, Dr. Bussard gave a talk at Google HQ about his currently favorite fusion technology and it has caused some commotion [slashdot.org].
It's profoundly disturbing that the US is willing to spend a trillion dollars on war in the middle east getting negative results and not willing to devote even one tenth of one percent of that to fusion energy prize legislation that pays for positive results only.
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http://focusfusion.org/log/index.php/site/article/ x_prize/ [focusfusion.org]
Unfortunately, the X-Prize Foundation response in 2006 was less than encouraging:
http://focusfusion.org/log/index.php/forums/viewth read/10/ [focusfusion.org]
Here's what I wrote about it:
http://thinkorthwim.com/2006/11/22/why-google-shou ld-go-nuclear/ [thinkorthwim.com]
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Just a thought (Score:3, Interesting)
The article doesn't say whether the Ph.D. crystallographer who solved the pathology problem won a prize, but I wonder if a prize would have made a difference.
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Did you ask him if he'd have ever written his thesis if a degree hadn't been attached to its success?
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Until it all gets published, researchers guard their data/results like a dragon guards its gold.
There are very few fields that I'm aware of where that is not the normal behavior.
As for Flemming, didn't he have a nice practice going on the side? Something about treating syphilis?
I want to win! (Score:1)
Our grad students mustn't have the cash money to pay for their thesiseses.
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http://mdsolar.blogspot.com/2007/01/slashdot-user
Problems solved by the masses... (Score:1)
Dead end. (Score:2)
Not even remotely. The word on the street is that SpaceShip One cost around $20 million - and Scaled Composites was the only entry that was fully funded. The remaining entries had essentially no funding.
It's also worth pointing out that historically, technology prizes tend to be won by point solutions - rather than the general purpose solution desired. The City of S [wikipedia.org]
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Notably Armadillo Aerospace certainly has been showing some surprising results, as has the Romanian ARCA group. Both have gone off to other areas now that the X-Prize has been "won".
I will admit though that many of the other 30 teams were there in name only, and it seems as though the entry fee they paid was only to help boost the overall succ
Two Things: (Score:2)
One, it seems almost exploitative, to fund innovation this way.
Two, it seems like a sizeable population of idle rich is necessary, to find a pool of investors sufficient to fund innovation this way.
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One thing a prize does is provide an open invite to the nonestablished 'inventors' to participate. While it might bring out some kooks, it also can bring out some who are 'thinking out of the box'. The predisposition of the greatest minds of the time in the longitude prize case was to solve the problem by astronom
A butt-kick for academia (Score:2)
It worked for the DARPA Grand Challenge, but not in the way most people think.
The prize was the carrot. But there was a stick, too. The Grand Challenge was a real threat to robotics funding at CMU and Stanford, which had been getting DARPA money for decades but were progressing very slowly. Originally, neither university's robotics group intended to enter. But there were apparently hints that if the non-university entries did significantly better than the people DARPA had been funding, the funding fo
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Special Case (Score:2)
If you're smart enough to win one of these prizes, don't be a dumbass - go file the patents and sell them the solution for 100x more!
The usefulness of waste (Score:1)
For example, the article presumably says that prizes are good. The concentration of money into one person's (or one body's) bank account so that it could be spent on stuff like this, could be considered "waste" (particularly when it's spent on really stupid shit).
Another example is how governments keep trying to reduce "inefficiencies" and programs that don't have proven results. The problem is, if you want to get one successful pro
Bandwagons are not good for the long haul (Score:1)
Prizes aren't a panacea. They won't replace corporate R&D labs or universities.
The targeting aspect of prizes is geared to the short term not the long term. The danger to the long term research is that prizes may achieve headline-making successes, and, as a result, clueless politicians and CEOs/CFOs may be inclined believe this is the best R&D funding model, because it allows them to parade short-term results in front of voters or share holders. This could lead to dumping or reducing funding to corporate R&D labs or universities, where what is currently 'blue sky' research
Prizes I would like to See (Score:2)
Here are the things I think we need a prize for. Each one is something that we scan get fairly quick advancements in, but appears just out of reach.
Cheap Silicon production (for solar power)
Better battery: 1. by weight and 2. by volume
Better Voice recognition software
Electronic voting machine with paper trail, prize awarded for the one hardest to break into.