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Outputs of the future

Image: Loughborough University [CC BY 2.0] via Flickr

Policy should both shape and respond to researchers’ priorities, say Catriona Manville and Steven Hill

In an ideal world, many researchers would like to reach new audiences and create impact, and tailor their outputs accordingly. This might mean changing the balance of outputs they produce, for example by creating fewer journal articles and more blogposts, webpages or videos.

However, decisions about which forms of output to produce are also influenced by factors such as career progression and personal preference, as well as institutional incentives and funder requirements.

This is not a static picture, of course. Funding and policy decisions influence both individuals and institutions. We can look at how research is changing, anticipate what may happen in the future, imagine the type of research culture we want to foster and develop, and seek to steer change in a positive direction.

To this end, Research England commissioned the independent research organisation RAND Europe to study the research landscape and get an understanding of how it may change in the future. The report on this work was published on 4 October.

The study included an online survey of more than 3,600 academics from across the spectrum of disciplines, career stages and institutions in England. This looked at the types of output and societal impact they produced, and how they expected these to change, or not, in the next 5 to 10 years. These insights could help researchers, universities and funders consider if and how the system may need to be adapted.

Disciplinary differences

Journal articles and conference contributions top the list of outputs produced by the majority of survey respondents. Book publications—particularly contributory chapters and authored books—are also produced by more than half of respondents who classify themselves as arts and humanities researchers.

In terms of output type, differences between disciplines are larger than those between different career stages. Fewer arts and humanities researchers produce journal articles than researchers in other disciplines. More researchers in science, engineering, medicine and mathematics produce peer-reviewed articles, code, research data sets, databases and preprints than those in the social sciences, arts and humanities.

Some outputs are highly specific to certain disciplines. Analysis plans, for example, are mainly produced by researchers in medicine, health and life sciences. Software is mainly the preserve of the physical sciences, engineering and mathematics.

Researchers expect the diversity of their work to increase. Those surveyed said they produced an average of 4.7 different types of output over a 5-to-10-year period. They expected this to rise to 6.5. The increase mainly reflects a shift towards producing outputs aimed at a wider audience, such as blogposts and webpages. 

Even so, more traditional outputs look set to remain strongly represented. The respondents said that they expected to produce more authored and edited books, book chapters, non-confidential research reports for external bodies and openly published peer reviews in the coming years.

Delivering impact

Most researchers expect journal articles and conference contributions to remain the dominant forms in many disciplines. And most researchers believe that journal articles are, and will continue to be, the main currency for reward and recognition, both at a national and an institutional level. However, this could be influenced by factors and cultural changes in the system—for example, if the pressure and incentives to produce a large number of outputs in selective journals decrease.

Looking at wider impacts, 77 per cent of researchers said they believed their work had current societal benefits, and 86 per cent said they believed it would have impact in the future. They also said they expected to spend slightly more of their efforts producing impact, relative to outputs, in the future; and they expected the average number of different types of impact stemming from their work to increase from 2.2 to 3.2.

As with outputs, different disciplines deliver different types of societal impact and these differences are expected to continue. Other drivers of change, such as collaboration, career mobility and open science, show similar differences in disciplinary attitudes and expectations.

This diversity indicates a need for debate about the role and value of different forms of output across research and within disciplines. For example, are all types of output of equal value and should they all be assessed, or do they serve different purposes? Answering this question will benefit not only funders and universities but the country as a whole, as it could result in better use of research resources.

Catriona Manville is a research leader at RAND Europe, where she works in the area of innovation, health and science. Steven Hill is director of research at Research England.

This article also appeared in Research Fortnight