Re-thinking excellence in research – RSC signs DORA – Royal Society of Chemistry

At the core of DORAs principles is the need to reduce reliance on the journal impact factor as a promotional tool and we now make a firm commitment to do just that. Our next steps are to decide upon a suite of metrics and measures, describing journal and research impact in a way that is appropriate for our portfolio of journals and most importantly is meaningful for our community.

DORA was developed in 2012 during the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Cell Biology in San Francisco. Its principles highlight a need to assess research on its own merits and to use opportunities provided by online publication, such as unconstrained page length, in addition to adopting new indicators of significance and impact.

In our capacity as a publisher, we partner with Altmetrics to provide a range of article-level metrics, for example citations and social media mentions, and we provide unrestricted access to citation metadata as a participant in the Initiative for Open Citations (I4OC).

In signing DORA we are now committing to review any reference list constraints in research articles, and we will explicitly encourage authors to cite original work rather than review articles to promote credit where it is due. Some of our journals already encourage author contribution statements this policy will be expanded to the whole portfolio.

And as a professional body, our recent work on prizes and awards, inclusion and diversity and our positions on research culture and open-access science also reflect DORAs case for rethinking assessment of scientific output.

Dr Pain said: It is very important to recognise that behind every paper or top professor is a team, and behind every team is a history of inspiring teachers, mentors and collaborators.

This is why our recent report Re-thinking Recognition presented our plan to champion skilled teams as well as individuals, celebrate the diversity of our community, acknowledge the opportunity-creators who go above and beyond their routine work, and reward those dedicated to solving global challenges.

Another RSC report, Breaking the Barriers, raised concerns around the issue of narrow definitions of excellence which are often related to having publications in high IF journals disproportionately affecting women.

Similarly, our 2019 report Is publishing in the chemical sciences gender biased? found that women are less likely than men to submit to journals with higher impact factors, and they are also more likely to have an article rejected without review.

DORA program director Dr Anna Hatch said: We welcome the commitment made by the Royal Society of Chemistry to promote responsible research assessment practices. The support and action of the entire academic community is needed to improve the ways that researchers are evaluated for hiring, promotion, and funding decisions.

Read more about DORA principles and its Ideas for Action

Read more:
Re-thinking excellence in research - RSC signs DORA - Royal Society of Chemistry

Related Posts