Data for: When academic impact is not enough: A concept mapping study characterizing excellence in practice-based research

SND-ID: 2024-464. Version: 1. DOI: https://doi.org/10.48723/at5e-gm73

Citation

Creator/Principal investigator(s)

Ulrica von Thiele Schwarz - Mälardalen University, The School of Health, Care and Social Welfare orcid

Emma Hedberg Rundgren - Karolinska Institutet, Department of Learning, Informatics, Management and Ethics orcid

Håkan Uvhagen - Stockholm Health Care Services, Research and Development Unit for Elderly Persons orcid

Åsa Hedberg Rundgren - Stockholm Gerontology Research Center Foundation orcid

Research principal

Karolinska Institutet - Department of Learning, Informatics, Management and Ethics rorId

Description

The data was collected during a research project investigating the conceptualization of research quality in the context of health and welfare research. Research quality is often discussed in terms of excellence, emphasizing replicability and trustworthiness. Practice-based research instead emphasis implementability and practical impact, and thus, may reflect other values and logics and challenge how high-quality practice-based research is defined. The aim of this study is to explore what characterizes excellent practice-based research.

The data was collected using the Group Concept Mapping methodology. Four data collection activities were used to collect the data: brainstorming, sorting, rating of importance, and rating of experience.

48 participants participated in the brainstorming session to generate the list of statements. 22 participants participated in the sorting activity which generated the similarity matrix. 13 participants rated the statements based on importance and 10 based on experience.

All participants were affiliated with or employed at a local or regional Research and devel

... Show more..
The data was collected during a research project investigating the conceptualization of research quality in the context of health and welfare research. Research quality is often discussed in terms of excellence, emphasizing replicability and trustworthiness. Practice-based research instead emphasis implementability and practical impact, and thus, may reflect other values and logics and challenge how high-quality practice-based research is defined. The aim of this study is to explore what characterizes excellent practice-based research.

The data was collected using the Group Concept Mapping methodology. Four data collection activities were used to collect the data: brainstorming, sorting, rating of importance, and rating of experience.

48 participants participated in the brainstorming session to generate the list of statements. 22 participants participated in the sorting activity which generated the similarity matrix. 13 participants rated the statements based on importance and 10 based on experience.

All participants were affiliated with or employed at a local or regional Research and development (R&D) organization and engaged in health and welfare research in Sweden in different ways.

The material consists of four data files:

1) List_of_statements.csv: List of statements from the brainstorming activity
2) Similarity_matrix1724400634.csv: Similarity matrix from the sorting activity. The similarity matrix show how many times each statement was sorted together with all other statements. This data-file was used as input for the multidimensional scaling.
3) Raw_rating_report_importance_1724400874.csv: Rating data for the importance rating. This data show how important each participant rated each statement on a 5-point scale. The scale ranged from 1=unimportant, to 5=very important. When data is missing, the corresponding cell has been left blank.
4) Raw_rating_report_experience_1724400881.csv: Rating data for the experience rating. This data show how much experience each participant rated that they had with each statement on a 5-point scale. The scale ranged from 1=The research characterizes the research I have experience of to a very low degree, to 5= The research characterizes the research I have experience of to a very high degree on the experience scale. When data is missing, the corresponding cell has been left blank.

All statement numbers correspond to the statement list in the file "List of statements". Show less..

Data contains personal data

No

Language

Method and outcome

Unit of analysis

Population

All participants were affiliated with or employed at a local or regional Research and development (R&D) organization and engaged in health and welfare research in Sweden in different ways. R&D units are examples of knowledge-broker agencies that are embedded in practice organizations but with staff often retaining affiliations to academic institutions, commissioned to conduct field research and development activities that support knowledge development and use in practice. Thus, they are operating in a context that are exposed both to traditional excellence criteria and expectations to conduct practice-based research.

Sampling procedure

This study was conducted in collaboration with R&D Welfare, a Swedish national organization for Research & Development professionals. Participants were invited independently to each of the activities in the concept mapping process using R&D Welfare’s mailing list, reaching about 350 recipients, social media, and their network meetings. Each invitation included written and/or oral information about the aim of the project, what participation in the relevant activity entailed, information about data management, and the fact that participation was voluntary.

Time period(s) investigated

2020-02-03 – 2020-10-16

Response rate/participation rate

48 participants participated in the brainstorming session to generate the list of statements. 22 participants participated in the sorting activity which generated the similarity matrix. 13 participants rated the statements based on importance and 10 based on experience.

Data format / data structure

Data collection
Geographic coverage

Geographic spread

Geographic location: Sweden

Administrative information

Responsible department/unit

Department of Learning, Informatics, Management and Ethics

Contributor(s)

Ulrica von Thiele Schwarz - Mälardalen University, The School of Health, Care and Social Welfare orcid

Åsa Hedberg Rundgren - Stockholm Gerontology Research Center Foundation orcid

Håkan Uvhagen - Stockholm Health Care Services, Research and Development Unit for Elderly Persons orcid

Topic and keywords

Research area

Health sciences (Standard för svensk indelning av forskningsämnen 2011)

Other social sciences (Standard för svensk indelning av forskningsämnen 2011)

Publications

License

CC0 1.0

Versions

Version 1. 2024-09-18

Version 1: 2024-09-18

DOI: https://doi.org/10.48723/at5e-gm73

Contact for questions about the data

Emma Hedberg Rundgren

emma.hedberg.rundgren@ki.se

Published: 2024-09-18