论文标题
研究资金总是有益的吗? 2014 - 20年英国研究的跨学科分析
Is Research Funding Always Beneficial? A Cross-Disciplinary Analysis of UK Research 2014-20
论文作者
论文摘要
现在,对外部资金的搜索和管理占据了很多宝贵的研究人员时间。尽管资金对于某些类型的研究至关重要,并且对其他研究有利,但它也可能限制学术选择和创造力。因此,重要的是要评估它是有害还是不必要的。在这里,我们调查了所有领域和所有主要研究资助者的资助研究是否往往是更高的质量。基于英国研究卓越框架(参考)2021年所有领域的113,877篇文章的同行评审质量得分,我们估计,从神学和宗教研究(16%+)到生物学科学,资助期刊文章比例存在实质性学科差异(91%+)。结果表明,对于所有最大的研究资助者以及所有领域,即使考虑了研究团队的规模,资助的研究总体上可能是更高的质量。但是,资助者之间在他们支持的研究的平均质量方面存在差异。资金似乎在与健康相关的领域中特别有益。结果没有显示出原因和影响,也不考虑收到的资金量,但与提高研究质量或高质量研究人员或项目赢得的资金一致。总之,没有广泛的研究领域无关紧要,因此没有任何领域可以忽略它。结果还表明,引用并非有效地代理艺术和人文科学的研究质量以及评估研究资金的大多数社会科学。
The search for and management of external funding now occupies much valuable researcher time. Whilst funding is essential for some types of research and beneficial for others, it may also constrain academic choice and creativity. Thus, it is important to assess whether it is ever detrimental or unnecessary. Here we investigate whether funded research tends to be higher quality in all fields and for all major research funders. Based on peer review quality scores for 113,877 articles from all fields in the UK's Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2021, we estimate that there are substantial disciplinary differences in the proportion of funded journal articles, from Theology and Religious Studies (16%+) to Biological Sciences (91%+). The results suggest that funded research is likely to be higher quality overall, for all the largest research funders, and for all fields, even after factoring out research team size. There are differences between funders in the average quality of the research they support, however. Funding seems particularly beneficial in health-related fields. The results do not show cause and effect and do not take into account the amount of funding received but are consistent with funding either improving research quality or being won by high quality researchers or projects. In summary, there are no broad fields of research in which funding is irrelevant, so no fields can afford to ignore it. The results also show that citations are not effective proxies for research quality in the arts and humanities and most social sciences for evaluating research funding.