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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The impact of research grant funding on scientific productivity

TLDR
In this article, the authors estimate the impact of receiving an NIH grant on subsequent publications and citations and show that the loss of a grant simply causes researchers to shift to another source of funding, consistent with a model in which the market for research funding is competitive.
About
This article is published in Journal of Public Economics.The article was published on 2011-10-01 and is currently open access. It has received 414 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Receipt.

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A scientometric mapping of research on Aeromonas infection in fish across the world (1998–2020)

TL;DR: Aeromonas spp are the most common devastating fish bacterial pathogens associated with a wide range of cultured freshwater fish resulting in mass mortality as discussed by the authors, which has the potential to implicate huge economic loss to the fish farming population in the world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of international research fellows in neurosurgery: results from a single academic center

TL;DR: In this article , the authors aimed to quantify the academic output of international research fellows in the Department of Neurosurgery at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, who worked in the department for at least 6 months over the past decade (2010-2020).
Journal ArticleDOI

Econometric Evidence of the Effectiveness of Different R&D Funding Sources

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reveal the most efficient funding sources and most efficient sectors in terms of R&D&I output: full-time researchers, their publications, PCT patent applications, technology receipts and technology payments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Les étapes du financement de la recherche académique : de la soumission en partenariat jusqu’à l’attribution et aux publications

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyse les determinants et les consequences des choix realises a chaque andape du processus de financement, and present nouveaux resultats en utilisant une base de donnees provenant de l’Agence anglaise de recherche en sciences physiques et de l'ingenieur (EPSRC).
Journal ArticleDOI

Identifying emerging scholars: seeing through the crystal ball of scholarship selection committees

Vincent Chandler
- 01 Jul 2019 - 
TL;DR: The relationship between scores given by 105 evaluators to 1900 doctoral candidates who received a scholarship and their outcomes 10 years after the competition is studied to better understand the added-value of the academic evaluation process.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Geographic Localization of Knowledge Spillovers as Evidenced by Patent Citations

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare the geographic location of patent citations to those of cited patents, as evidence of the extent to which knowledge spillovers are geographically localized, and find that citations to U.S. patents are more likely to come from the U. S., and more likely than coming from the same state and SMSA as cited patents than one would expect based only on the preexisting concentration of related research activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Matthew effect in science. The reward and communication systems of science are considered.

TL;DR: The psychosocial conditions and mechanisms underlying the Matthew effect are examined and a correlation between the redundancy function of multiple discoveries and the focalizing function of eminent men of science is found—a function which is reinforced by the great value these men place upon finding basic problems and by their self-assurance.
Posted Content

Real Effects of Academic Research

TL;DR: In this article, the existence of geographically mediated "spillovers" from university research to commercial innovation is explored using state-level time-series data on corporate patents, corporate R&D, and university research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Identification and estimation of treatment effects with a regression-discontinuity design

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that identifying conditions invoked in previous applications of regression discontinuity methods are often overly strong and that treatment effects can be nonparametrically identified under an RD design by a weak functional form restriction.
BookDOI

Higher education : handbook of theory and research

John C. Smart
TL;DR: In this article, Nunez et al. present the CECE model, a new theory of success among Racially Diverse College Student Populations (CECE) model, and the Completion Agenda, the Unintended Consequences for Equity in Community Colleges.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (13)
Q1. What are the contributions in this paper?

In this paper, the authors estimate the impact of receiving an NIH grant on subsequent publications and citations. 

Given the importance of technological innovation for economic growth and the considerable public resources devoted to R & D, further research is clearly warranted. In future work, the authors plan to explore the impact of NIH funding on patents, which may be a more useful measure of societal value. 

While the existence of out-of-order funding, rejected awards, and reapplication makesa sharp RD design infeasible, it is still possible to leverage the nonlinear relationship between normalized priority score and the probability of eventual grant receipt to identify the causal impact of research funding. 

3Because funding decisions are made within institutes (in contrast to research grantproposals, which are evaluated by review groups examining applications from different institutes), the NIH normalizes scores within review groups. 

On average, the sampled articles listed 2.45 sources of funding, with about 30 percent of articles listing at least three different sources of funding. 

In the United States, for example, the National Insittutes of Health (NIH) and the National Science Foundation (NSF) allocate over $30 billion annually for basic and applied research in the sciences. 

The authors also drop 5,089 R01 applications from institute-years in which grants did not appear to be allocated strictly on the basis of the observed priority score cutoff. 

Postdoctoral fellowships have a significantly greater impact on researchers in the social sciences than those in either the biological or physical sciences in terms of publications and citations. 

Since name frequency is unlikely to be correlated with whether an individual is just above or below the funding cutoff (conditional on flexible controls for her priority score), this restriction will not influence the consistency of their estimates. 

There are several ways in which unsuccessful researchers might obtain funding to continue their research: (1) they might obtain funding from another source, such as the NSF, a private foundation or their home institution; (2) they might collaborate with another researcher who was successful at obtaining NIH funding; or (3) they might collaborate with another researcher who was successful at obtaining non-NIH funding. 

Their second approach relies upon the fact that NIH funding is awarded on the basis ofobservable priority scores, and that there is a highly nonlinear relationship between this score and the probability of funding. 

Because of this, the local average treatment effect (LATE) implicitly compares the productivity of applicants who received a grant because of a low application score to that of applicants who were rejected due to a higher score (controlling for a smooth function of the normalized application score). 

One possibility is that NIH funding could displace funding from other public agencies or private entities, either because the researcher is less inclined to apply for such funding if she has already received an NIH award or because other funding agencies correctly perceive the marginal utility of an additional dollar to a funded researcher isless valuable than an additional dollar to an unfunded researcher.