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Features: Visualizing research performance: Bringing strategic insight to research management
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Features
Visualizing research performance:
Bringing strategic insight to research management

By Neal Katz, Senior Solutions Marketing Manager, Elsevier, New York, NY, USA

Today’s academic institutions are continuously looking for ways to improve their standing as world-class research bodies. Gaining a leadership position in research helps institutions recruit and maintain high-quality research staff. This, in turn, helps institutions compete for grant money.

To recruit the best faculty and improve grant proposal outcomes, administrators try to get the best data available to benchmark their strengths against peers, spot trends in interdisciplinary research where new strengths can be created, and evaluate potential staff candidates and collaborators. These efforts are labor-intensive and often inefficient due to a lack of comprehensive and objective information on these topics.

Painting a clearer picture

Recognizing the need for a high-quality and cost-efficient solution to this analytical problem, Elsevier has teamed with the academic research group SciTech Strategies to develop a strategic tool to measure research leadership and identify emerging trends where future leadership can be established.

Figure 1: Each map provides a "fingerprint," such as this one from an
unidentified institution, of an institution’s particular competencies.
Figure 1: Each map provides a "fingerprint," such as this one from an unidentified institution, of an institution’s particular competencies.

Based on cocitation analysis and an innovative visualization technique, this tool uses the Scopus database to present a graphical view of an institution’s research performance from an interdisciplinary perspective. Rather than show individual subject areas, this visualizer creates a map or “Wheel of Science” that illustrates research performance across scientific areas (Figure 1). Each area of distinctive competency is presented as a circle within this wheel.

In addition, the reported information can be compared with the same type of information from top competing organizations. Thus the tool provides the following multifold benefits:

Figure 2: The tool identifies competitors for each specific research area.
Figure 2: The tool identifies competitors for each specific research area.

This new research performance visualization tool is scheduled to be launched in 2009. Elsevier is actively engaging opinion leaders, like Library Connect readers, in order to fully understand the challenges you face when it comes to analyzing and evaluating your institutes’ research performance and positions. If you’re interested in being involved in the development process, please contact Research-performance@elsevier.com. end of article
 

Questions the new tool will help academic administrators answer

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