“Survey respondents at all career stages report colleagues engaging in territorial and possessive behaviours — but early-career researchers are most often affected.
Almost half of the scientists who responded to a survey have experienced territorial and undermining behaviours from other scientists — most commonly during their PhD studies. Of those affected, nearly half said that the perpetrator was a high-profile researcher, and one-third said it was their own supervisor.
Most of the survey respondents were ecologists, but the study’s organizers suspect that surveys focusing on other disciplines would yield similar results.
The gatekeeping behaviours that the study documents “damage careers, particularly of early-career and marginalized researchers”, says lead author Jose Valdez, an ecologist at the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research in Leipzig. “Most alarming was that nearly one in five of those affected left academia or science entirely.”
Valdez and his colleagues call the possessiveness shown by many researchers the ‘Gollum effect’, after the character Gollum in The Lord of the Rings (1954–55), whose one goal in life is to hoard an object of great power for himself. The study was published today in One Earth.
“It makes something tangible that all researchers probably have experienced one way or another: the territoriality of other researchers and fear of being ‘scooped’,” says computational social scientist Jana Lasser at the University of Graz in Austria, who co-founded the Network against Abuse of Power in Science.
Unnamed hazard
That academic workplaces are often toxic environments is hardly news. But “despite growing attention to issues such as bullying, harassment and mental health in academia”, Valdez says, “the root cause of many of these problems — the toxic possessiveness and gatekeeping — didn’t have a name or formal recognition”. Enter the Gollum effect, which Valdez defines as including possessive behaviours, attempts to undermine others and efforts to restrict access to data, resources or opportunities.
Valdez and his colleagues distributed their survey through professional conservation and ecology societies and social media. To reduce self-selection bias, they presented it as a survey about experiences at different career stages, not mentioning the Gollum effect until the survey was under way. The survey drew 563 responses, representing 64 nationalities.
Familiar monster
The Gollum effect was common: 44% of respondents said they had experienced it. Of these, 18% had experienced it many times. In 46% of cases, scientists said that the perpetrator was a high-profile researcher, and 35% said it was their supervisor.
Among those who experienced the Gollum effect, 54% said it happened during their PhD studies, 32% during their master’s studies, 31% as a postdoctoral researcher and 27% as an undergraduate. But independent researchers, senior researchers and even professors experienced it, too.
“The most surprising finding was the profound impact of the Gollum effect on career trajectories,” says Valdez. More than two-thirds of those affected said that the experience had had a moderate or large effect on their career path, and some 20% had left academia or science completely as a result.
Respondents described incidences of data hoarding, ideas theft by supervisors and defamation at conferences. “Collaborator has ‘reserved’ important research avenues,” wrote one respondent, “and is actively withholding data from our entire research group”. Another wrote, “I was told I wouldn’t be able to publish anything until the collaborator published their study, which has been in prep for over six years now.”
Power dynamics
“Recognizing the Gollum effect helps broaden the conversation by emphasizing how power dynamics and possessive behaviours sustain a toxic environment,” says Morteza Mahmoudi, a nanomedicine researcher at Michigan State University in East Lansing who co-founded the Academic Parity Movement. Reforms that address these behaviours could be more effective than efforts that target only overt bullying, he says.
Mahmoudi and Lasser agree that the results can be generalized to other fields. But Lasser notes that the study might not accurately capture the prevalence of the Gollum effect, because the survey respondents were self-selected and the sample size was fairly small.
For Valdez, the study is personal. He says he has experienced the Gollum effect many times — during his PhD and since — perpetrated by supervisors, members of his laboratory group and others. “One of my papers was almost rejected solely because a reviewer felt I had encroached on ‘their’ topic,” he says. “These experiences made me question whether I belonged in science at all,” he continues, adding that he considered leaving academia.
For those experiencing the Gollum effect, Valdez has some advice: “The problem isn’t you. It’s a broken culture that thrives in silence and isolation.”” [1]
1. Nature 641, 1082-1083 (2025) 20 May, Julian Nowogrodzki
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