| Literature DB >> 29415047 |
Pauline Zardo1, Adrian G Barnett2, Nicolas Suzor1, Tim Cahill3.
Abstract
The impact of research on the world beyond academia has increasingly become an area of focus in research performance assessments internationally. Impact assessment is expected to incentivise researchers to increase engagement with industry, government and the public more broadly. Increased engagement is in turn expected to increase translation of research so decision-makers can use research to inform development of policies, programs, practices, processes, products, and other mechanisms, through which impact can be realised. However, research has shown that various factors affect research use, and evidence on 'what works' to increase decision-makers' use of research is limited. The Conversation is an open access research communication platform, published under Creative Commons licence, which translates research into news articles to engage a general audience, aiming to improve understanding of current issues and complex social problems. To identify factors that predict use of academic research and expertise reported in The Conversation, regression analyses were performed using The Conversation Australia 2016 Annual Survey data. A broad range of factors predicted use, with engagement actions being the most common. Interestingly, different types of engagement actions predicted different types of use. This suggests that to achieve impact through increased engagement, a deeper understanding of how and why different engagement actions elicit different types of use is needed. Findings also indicate The Conversation is overcoming some of the most commonly identified barriers to the use of research: access, relevance, actionable outcomes, and timeliness. As such, The Conversation offers an effective model for providing access to and communicating research in a way that enables use, a necessary precursor to achieving research impact.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29415047 PMCID: PMC5802909 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0192290
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Predictors of use of a The Conversation article.
Positive predictors are in green and negative in orange.
| Logistic Regression—odds ratio (p value) | Classification Tree—probability ratio | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Engagement Actions | ||||||||
| Republished the article | ||||||||
| Left a comment on the article | ||||||||
| Shared an article on social networks (e.g. Facebook, Twitter) or by email | ||||||||
| Discussed with friends or colleagues | ||||||||
| Printed to read or share | ||||||||
| Contacted the author to discuss their ideas | ||||||||
| Used the article in a report | ||||||||
| Used the article as a classroom resource or as basis of discussion with students | ||||||||
| Contacted a local politician or government official | ||||||||
| Undertaken further research | ||||||||
| None | ||||||||
| Main Reasons for Reading TC | ||||||||
| To explain the news | ||||||||
| To assist in my work / research | ||||||||
| To explore issues I care about / for interest | ||||||||
| For expert opinions and facts | ||||||||
| To read about issues not covered elsewhere | ||||||||
| To find out about new research and breakthroughs | ||||||||
| It is better than the alternatives | ||||||||
| Value | ||||||||
| Academic expertise | ||||||||
| Creative commons / open source publishing | ||||||||
| Author disclosures | ||||||||
| Opportunity to engage with people outside my normal networks | ||||||||
| Publication Follow Up | ||||||||
| Invitations to speak at conferences | ||||||||
| Dashboard Use | ||||||||
| Demonstrating engagement to apply for research funding | ||||||||
| Other (please specify) | ||||||||
| Employ Status | ||||||||
| Employed, full time | ||||||||
| Employed, part time | ||||||||
| Unpaid work / volunteer | ||||||||
| Retired | ||||||||
| Income | ||||||||
| $49,999 to $99,999 | ||||||||
| $100,000 -$149,000 | ||||||||
| $150,000 -$299,000 | ||||||||
| $300,000 plus | ||||||||
| Prefer not to say | ||||||||
| Education | ||||||||
| Undergraduate Degree | ||||||||
| Graduate/Postgraduate Certificate | ||||||||
| Graduate/Postgraduate Diploma | ||||||||
| Master's Degree | ||||||||
| Doctorate | ||||||||
| Sector | ||||||||
| Consulting & Strategy | ||||||||
| Energy & Resources | ||||||||
| Government, Policy or Public Sector | ||||||||
| Media / Journalism | ||||||||
| Role title | ||||||||
| Chairperson, director, CEO/CFO,COO, owner, partner or proprietor | ||||||||
| General manager, department head, senior executive, manager, or professional | ||||||||
| Politician, policy officer, or government employee | ||||||||
| Media professional (e.g., journalist, writer, broadcaster, advertiser, PR) | ||||||||
| Not applicable | ||||||||
| Business Type | ||||||||
| Construction | ||||||||
| Accommodation, cafes and restaurants | ||||||||
| Transport and storage | ||||||||
| Finance and insurance | ||||||||
| Health and community services | ||||||||
| Cultural and recreational services | ||||||||
| Age | ||||||||
| 35–49 | ||||||||
| 50–64 | ||||||||
| 65 or older | ||||||||
Overview of key factors predicting use of The Conversation articles.
| Type of use of | Factors predicting use in both logistic regression and classification tree | Related survey question |
|---|---|---|
| Inform development of strategy, policy, programs, etc. | Used article in a report | What actions have you taken as a result of reading a |
| Republished the article | ||
| Undertaken further research | ||
| To assist in my work/research | What are the main reasons you read | |
| Politician, policy officer, or government employee | What is your role title? | |
| Support an existing strategy, policy, program, etc., decision. | Used article in a report | What actions have you taken as a result of reading a |
| Discussed with friends or colleagues | ||
| Chairperson, director, CEO/CFO, COO, owner, partner or proprietor | What is your role title? | |
| General manager, department head, senior executive, manager, or professional | ||
| Politician, policy officer, or government employee | ||
| Inform understanding, discussion and debate related to work | To assist in my work/research | What are the main reasons you read |
| Inform own attitude or behaviour change in personal life | Discuss with friends or colleagues | What actions have you taken as a result of reading a |
| To explain the news | What are the main reasons you read The Conversation | |
| For expert opinion and facts |