| Literature DB >> 30863750 |
Faekah Gohar1, Patrick Maschmeyer2, Bechara Mfarrej3, Mathieu Lemaire4, Lucy R Wedderburn5,6, Maria Grazia Roncarolo7, Annet van Royen-Kerkhof8.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: collaboration; innovation; interdiscipinarity; societal impact; translational medical research
Year: 2019 PMID: 30863750 PMCID: PMC6400109 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2019.00035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1Definitions and illustrations of independent, multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary working.
Recommendations to stimulate sustainable interdisciplinary research environments.
| Include a trainee or have a future team member seek additional training in a program with a focus on interdisciplinary research. |
| Determine the extent of collaboration wished (inter- vs. multi-disciplinary). |
| Plan the team composition, the balance of abilities and role delegation. Consider including a scientist in an integration and implementation role. |
| Allocate the supervisor role to someone with experience of interdisciplinary project supervision, not necessarily the most senior. |
| Plan early for potential project hurdles, such as funding issues, allocation of funds, credits etc. |
| Plan the allocation of credits, such as the authorship order, early. |
| Focus on the training of inexperienced project members. |
| Consider the implementation of a team-based mentoring program and integrate team-based evaluation. |
| Ask for anonymous feedback from all team members on what worked well and what could be done better to provide helpful hints to improve the team performance. |
| Consider success of the project to be not only based upon achievement of publication in high-impact journals, but rather achievement of societal goals and wider translational objectives. |
| All team members actively engage in knowledge translation to promote the project in their own field, including considering the use of “newer” resources or publication modes such as interactive Journals or Social Media. |