6533b858fe1ef96bd12b629f

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Does it take two to tango? Factors related to the ease of societal uptake of scientific knowledge

Paul Stephen BenneworthJulia Olmos PeñuelaJulia Olmos-peñuelaElena Castro-martínez

subject

Value (ethics)Sociology of scientific knowledgeKnowledge managementPublic AdministrationBest practiceResearch structuresGeography Planning and DevelopmentOpennessManagement Monitoring Policy and Law050905 science studiesOpen research0502 economics and businessPersonal knowledge managementOpenness to experienceCcientists characteristicsbusiness.industryMETIS-31747605 social sciencesKnowledge value chainIR-100930Scientists’ characteristics.Hybrid scientific governanceORGANIZACION DE EMPRESASScience policy0509 other social sciencesPsychologybusinessResearch micro-practices050203 business & managementOpen research behaviours

description

Science policy increasingly focuses on maximising societal benefits from science and technology investments, but often reduces those benefits to activities involving codifying and selling knowledge, thereby idealising best practice academic behaviours around entrepreneurial superstars. This paper argues that societal value depends on knowledge being used, making knowledge's eventual exploitation partly dependent upon on whether other users-societal or scientific-can use that knowledge (i.e. on how far new knowledge is cognate with users' existing knowledge). When scientists incorporate user knowledge into their research processes, what we call 'open research behaviours', their knowledge may be more usable. We develop a set of hypotheses concerning whether researchers' personal and professional characteristics are associated with open research behaviours. We find evidence which suggests that, whilst personal characteristics are not associated with open research behaviours, researchers who experience professional signals validating open research behaviours are more likely to demonstrate such behaviours.

10.1093/scipol/scw016http://hdl.handle.net/10261/161484