🧵on 🐦 on our webinar this morning on co-production with Kate Pahl and Sarah Whatley:
https://twitter.com/UofGPE/status/1673989427473907714

#UKRIOevents #CoProduction #ResearchEthics #Webinar

University of Glasgow Public Engagement on Twitter

“.@adx943 on practice reseach ethics: "In the arts there is often crossover between research community and professional practice community. This means researchers may have easy access to the community, as they are already part of it. This closeness means establishing ground rules"”

Twitter

Should we have methods review before a research study starts, asks @lakens?

We could have equivalents to #ResearchEthics committees to do this. Other solutions include Registered Reports.

Objections: not necessary, redundant, attacks academic freedom.

#UKRIOevents #ResearchMethods

The godfather of retractions, the top dog of watchdogs, Dr. @ivanoransky himself, is our afternoon keynote speaker.

#Retractions are rising, but not enough. About 1/1000 publications are retracted, with a lag. 40,000 total are in the @retractionwatch database. #UKRIOevents

What advances a researcher's career isn't the same as what advances science.

Karen Stroobants refers to research by Noemie Aubert Bonn and Wim Pinxten:
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0243664
#UKRIOevents #ReformingRA

Advancing science or advancing careers? Researchers’ opinions on success indicators

The way in which we assess researchers has been under the radar in the past few years. Critics argue that current research assessments focus on productivity and that they increase unhealthy pressures on scientists. Yet, the precise ways in which assessments should change is still open for debate. We circulated a survey with Flemish researchers to understand how they work, and how they would rate the relevance of specific indicators used in research assessments. We found that most researchers worked far beyond their expected working schedule. We also found that, although they spent most of their time doing research, respondents wished they could dedicate more time to it and spend less time writing grants and performing other activities such as administrative duties and meetings. When looking at success indicators, we found that indicators related to openness, transparency, quality, and innovation were perceived as highly important in advancing science, but as relatively overlooked in career advancement. Conversely, indicators which denoted of prestige and competition were generally rated as important to career advancement, but irrelevant or even detrimental in advancing science. Open comments from respondents further revealed that, although indicators which indicate openness, transparency, and quality (e.g., publishing open access, publishing negative findings, sharing data, etc.) should ultimately be valued more in research assessments, the resources and support currently in place were insufficient to allow researchers to endorse such practices. In other words, current research assessments are inadequate and ignore practices which are essential in contributing to the advancement of science. Yet, before we change the way in which researchers are being assessed, supporting infrastructures must be put in place to ensure that researchers are able to commit to the activities that may benefit the advancement of science.

Research assessment is key to #ResearchCulture, argues Karen Stroobants. A move from narrow definitions, metrics, and 'excellence' to qualitative assessment and a focus on 'how' vs 'what', is needed. #UKRIOevents #ReformingRA

Naomi Irvine of People Development Associates gives us a taste of 'fierce conversations' for leadership training. What is holding back discussions?

What is talked about, who is invited, and how it is talked about determines what happens in an organisation.
#UKRIOevents #ResearchCulture

How research technicians view #ResearchCulture: Catrin Harris of MI Talent and Sarah Bennett of the University of Warwick. Previous studies by Wellcome and ARMA were useful, but left out the technical side. #UKRIOevents

The #UKRIOEVENTS talk by Petra Boynton on neglected "how to-s" of research rests I think on implicit premises that

i) Programmes deliver #ResearchTraining

ii) or career paths are always geared towards research.

Acknowledging that these are not givens could probably be a good step to help us to improve approaches to #ResearchIntegrity.

Dr Boynton outlines a range of factors on the student side (partly speaking to ii above) that we should be mindful of.

"This is my favourite thing to discuss" - Dr Petra Boynton kicks off our annual conference with the 'neglected "how to's" of research and how they effect ethics and integrity. #UKRIOevents #ResearchIntegrity #ResearchEthics

Final thought from our #ResearchCulture webinar, from Rachel Persad of GuildHE:

Reflect or perish 🤔

#ResearchIntegrity #UKRIOevents #GuildHE #PublishOrPerish