Social capital in academia: Measuring researchers’ collaboration habits versus preferences

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Social capital in academia : Measuring researchers’ collaboration habits versus preferences. / Zuccala, Alesia Ann; Jensen, Maria S. ; Wærne, Emilie K.; Hertzum, Morten.

In: Research Evaluation, 2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Zuccala, AA, Jensen, MS, Wærne, EK & Hertzum, M 2024, 'Social capital in academia: Measuring researchers’ collaboration habits versus preferences', Research Evaluation.

APA

Zuccala, A. A., Jensen, M. S., Wærne, E. K., & Hertzum, M. (Accepted/In press). Social capital in academia: Measuring researchers’ collaboration habits versus preferences. Research Evaluation.

Vancouver

Zuccala AA, Jensen MS, Wærne EK, Hertzum M. Social capital in academia: Measuring researchers’ collaboration habits versus preferences. Research Evaluation. 2024.

Author

Zuccala, Alesia Ann ; Jensen, Maria S. ; Wærne, Emilie K. ; Hertzum, Morten. / Social capital in academia : Measuring researchers’ collaboration habits versus preferences. In: Research Evaluation. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{aa97abc93ff74e2c97a12013779aef29,
title = "Social capital in academia: Measuring researchers{\textquoteright} collaboration habits versus preferences",
abstract = "Many studies concerning social capital in academia have used social network theory and social network analysis as an approach. Social network analysis focuses on a boundary set of actors in a network and what it reveals as an outcome of social capital. However, social capital is also a precursor or catalyst for cooperative work. Here, we investigate researchers{\textquoteright} perceptions of this, based on the hypothesis that what academics do when they collaborate may not relate to what they actually prefer. We have piloted a questionnaire-survey to examine this, focusing on the goal-seeking behavior of publishing new research. Data were collected from 1,092 academics, across 6 faculties at the University of Copenhagen: Health and Medical Science, Science, Social Sciences, Humanities, Law, and Theology. The survey of collaboration habits first revealed significant differences at the level of gender, academic position, years active in publishing, and faculty. Collaboration preferences, interpreted from social capital theory, were also measured according to three interrelated dimensions – i.e., cognitive, relational, and structural. Survey respondents tended to prefer the cognitive-relational aspects of collaboration (i.e., reciprocity and obligation; shared understandings), over certain structural determinants (i.e., linking to networks). Few habits and preferences correlated and did not correlate strongly. Amongst the researchers that indicated a preference for bridging networks (i.e., working with people who have different types of expertise), few confirmed this as a collaboration habit, particularly with experts from organisations outside academia (i.e., the business/public sector). ",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Social Capital, Research Collaboration",
author = "Zuccala, {Alesia Ann} and Jensen, {Maria S.} and W{\ae}rne, {Emilie K.} and Morten Hertzum",
year = "2024",
language = "English",
journal = "Research Evaluation",
issn = "0958-2029",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Social capital in academia

T2 - Measuring researchers’ collaboration habits versus preferences

AU - Zuccala, Alesia Ann

AU - Jensen, Maria S.

AU - Wærne, Emilie K.

AU - Hertzum, Morten

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Many studies concerning social capital in academia have used social network theory and social network analysis as an approach. Social network analysis focuses on a boundary set of actors in a network and what it reveals as an outcome of social capital. However, social capital is also a precursor or catalyst for cooperative work. Here, we investigate researchers’ perceptions of this, based on the hypothesis that what academics do when they collaborate may not relate to what they actually prefer. We have piloted a questionnaire-survey to examine this, focusing on the goal-seeking behavior of publishing new research. Data were collected from 1,092 academics, across 6 faculties at the University of Copenhagen: Health and Medical Science, Science, Social Sciences, Humanities, Law, and Theology. The survey of collaboration habits first revealed significant differences at the level of gender, academic position, years active in publishing, and faculty. Collaboration preferences, interpreted from social capital theory, were also measured according to three interrelated dimensions – i.e., cognitive, relational, and structural. Survey respondents tended to prefer the cognitive-relational aspects of collaboration (i.e., reciprocity and obligation; shared understandings), over certain structural determinants (i.e., linking to networks). Few habits and preferences correlated and did not correlate strongly. Amongst the researchers that indicated a preference for bridging networks (i.e., working with people who have different types of expertise), few confirmed this as a collaboration habit, particularly with experts from organisations outside academia (i.e., the business/public sector).

AB - Many studies concerning social capital in academia have used social network theory and social network analysis as an approach. Social network analysis focuses on a boundary set of actors in a network and what it reveals as an outcome of social capital. However, social capital is also a precursor or catalyst for cooperative work. Here, we investigate researchers’ perceptions of this, based on the hypothesis that what academics do when they collaborate may not relate to what they actually prefer. We have piloted a questionnaire-survey to examine this, focusing on the goal-seeking behavior of publishing new research. Data were collected from 1,092 academics, across 6 faculties at the University of Copenhagen: Health and Medical Science, Science, Social Sciences, Humanities, Law, and Theology. The survey of collaboration habits first revealed significant differences at the level of gender, academic position, years active in publishing, and faculty. Collaboration preferences, interpreted from social capital theory, were also measured according to three interrelated dimensions – i.e., cognitive, relational, and structural. Survey respondents tended to prefer the cognitive-relational aspects of collaboration (i.e., reciprocity and obligation; shared understandings), over certain structural determinants (i.e., linking to networks). Few habits and preferences correlated and did not correlate strongly. Amongst the researchers that indicated a preference for bridging networks (i.e., working with people who have different types of expertise), few confirmed this as a collaboration habit, particularly with experts from organisations outside academia (i.e., the business/public sector).

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Social Capital

KW - Research Collaboration

M3 - Journal article

JO - Research Evaluation

JF - Research Evaluation

SN - 0958-2029

ER -

ID: 397719569