Academia needs to do more to recognise teamwork in research, a conference has heard, amid concerns that the pandemic may have made some collaborators less visible.
Matthew Flinders, professor of politics at the University of Sheffield, said that the arts, humanities and social sciences, in particular, âhave been a little bit behind the curve in keeping up with the shifting landscape, which is heading towards a team-based approachâ to scholarship.
However, speaking at the Wellcome Trustâs Reimagine Research Culture Festival, Professor Flinders said that those subject areas âhave a lot to offer in the understanding and doing of team science, because itâs those disciplines that study human behaviour, culture, interactionâ.
âWhat we do know is that sometimes where team science is done, itâs not always done in the most inclusive, fair or open manner. So maybe, although team science isnât common within the social sciences, arts and humanities, itâs those disciplines that have an as-yet-unrealised potential to help shape how we want to redefine, reinvigorate, reimagine team science.â
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Jeroen Geurts, president of the Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development and executive board member of the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research, said that as of last year, teams of scientists were eligible for the annual Spinoza Prize, known as the âDutch Nobel prizeâ, but the criteria for teams are different.
âIf you go for a team award, then you have to have a demonstrably greater effect than individual achievements and that, I think, is an issue, apart from the fact it took us 20 years or more to move from individualised awards to more team-guided awards. It has to be defended [if] you want to go for a team award and that is something that should be much more normal,â he said.
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Philippa Saunders, chair of reproductive steroids at the University of Edinburgh and registrar at the Academy of Medical Sciences, which published a , said she was âconcernedâ that the Covid crisis had âmade some people less visible in their teamsâ.
âPeople are falling behind in terms of being able to network and I have concerns that we need to revisit this issue [of rewarding teamwork] and keep up the pressure,â she said.
Dawn Edge, professor of mental health and inclusivity at the University of Manchester, said that the conversation around teamwork had to move beyond simply making sure all members of teams got credit for their work.
Responding to a question from a conference delegate, who said they did not âfeel that I could be a PI [principal investigator] any more in clinical researchâ as they had âsignificant disabilities that were getting worseâ, Professor Edge said that it should be possible to be a âco-PIâ.
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âAll the skills, knowledge and expertise that person has shouldnât be lost because they have a disability of some kind...We need to be a bit more creative in the way we think about truly enabling people to participate,â she said.
There have long been calls for UK research councils to allow more than one PI to be listed on funding applications.
Heidi Johansen-Berg, director of the Oxford Centre for Functional MRI of the Brain at the University of Oxford, said that the sector needed to move away from thinking that âto be a proper scientist, you need to think about your science day and nightâ.
âPeople can make really valuable contributions in compartmentalised bits of their time and life. Itâs more to do with the quality of their contribution than the number of hours they can devote to it,â she said.
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