Abstract
As federal programs are held more accountable for their research investments, The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) has developed a new method to quantify the impact of our funded research on the scientific and broader communities. In this article we review traditional bibliometric analyses, address challenges associated with them, and describe a new bibliometric analysis method, the Automated Research Impact Assessment (ARIA). ARIA taps into a resource that has only rarely been used for bibliometric analyses: references cited in “important” research artifacts, such as policies, regulations, clinical guidelines, and expert panel reports. The approach includes new statistics that science managers can use to benchmark contributions to research by funding source. This new method provides the ability to conduct automated impact analyses of federal research that can be incorporated in program evaluations. We apply this method to several case studies to examine the impact of NIEHS funded research.
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Notes
We use the word “grant” in this paper broadly, to include both projects that are conducted internally at NIH as well as “extramural” research that occurs beyond the walls of NIH.
Kostoff used the term research impact assessment to describe a broad range of methods to evaluate research, including peer review, retrospective methods, bibliometrics, co-occurrence, cost-benefit and economic analyses, and network analyses (Kostoff 1995). We coined the phrase automated research impact assessment without knowing that the term was already in use, but feel that there is a good fit between our new bibliometric method and Kostoff’s vision for broader research impact assessment activities.
See supplemental materials for an example of the raw data generated automatically in this report.
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Acknowledgments
This work was supported by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS). The authors would like to acknowledge the work of Sheila Newton and Raymond Grissom, Jr., of the NIEHS Office of Planning and Policy Evaluation, who conducted an early manual review of an EPA Ozone Regulation as a test of this new bibliometric research method. Many thanks also to James Corrigan (National Cancer Institute) who provided comments on early versions of this paper; and to James Onken and Brian Haugen in the NIH Office of Extramural Research, Office of Data Analysis Tools and Systems, who currently manage the SPIRES database (and RePARS tool) for the National Institutes of Health.
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Drew, C.H., Pettibone, K.G., Finch, F.O. et al. Automated Research Impact Assessment: a new bibliometrics approach. Scientometrics 106, 987–1005 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11192-015-1828-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11192-015-1828-7