TY - JOUR
T1 - Terms in journal articles associating with high quality
T2 - can qualitative research be world-leading?
AU - Thelwall, Mike
AU - Kousha, Kayvan
AU - Abdoli, Mahshid
AU - Stuart, Emma
AU - Makita, Meiko
AU - Wilson, Paul
AU - Levitt, Jonathan M.
N1 - © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited
This study was funded by Research England, Scottish Funding Council, Higher Education Funding Council for Wales and Department for the Economy, Northern Ireland as part of the Future Research Assessment Programme (https://www.jisc.ac.uk/future-research-assessment-programme).
PY - 2023/8/25
Y1 - 2023/8/25
N2 - Purpose: Scholars often aim to conduct high quality research and their success is judged primarily by peer reviewers. Research quality is difficult for either group to identify, however and misunderstandings can reduce the efficiency of the scientific enterprise. In response, we use a novel term association strategy to seek quantitative evidence of aspects of research that are associated with high or low quality.Design/methodology/approach: We extracted the words and 2–5-word phrases most strongly associated with different quality scores in each of 34 Units of Assessment (UoAs) in the Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2021. We extracted the terms from 122,331 journal articles 2014–2020 with individual REF2021 quality scores.Findings: The terms associating with high- or low-quality scores vary between fields but relate to writing styles, methods and topics. We show that the first-person writing style strongly associates with higher quality research in many areas because it is the norm for a set of large prestigious journals. We found methods and topics that associate with both high- and low-quality scores. Worryingly, terms associated with educational and qualitative research attract lower quality scores in multiple areas. REF experts may rarely give high scores to qualitative or educational research because the authors tend to be less competent, because it is harder to do world leading research with these themes, or because they do not value them.Originality/value: This is the first investigation of journal article terms associating with research quality.
AB - Purpose: Scholars often aim to conduct high quality research and their success is judged primarily by peer reviewers. Research quality is difficult for either group to identify, however and misunderstandings can reduce the efficiency of the scientific enterprise. In response, we use a novel term association strategy to seek quantitative evidence of aspects of research that are associated with high or low quality.Design/methodology/approach: We extracted the words and 2–5-word phrases most strongly associated with different quality scores in each of 34 Units of Assessment (UoAs) in the Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2021. We extracted the terms from 122,331 journal articles 2014–2020 with individual REF2021 quality scores.Findings: The terms associating with high- or low-quality scores vary between fields but relate to writing styles, methods and topics. We show that the first-person writing style strongly associates with higher quality research in many areas because it is the norm for a set of large prestigious journals. We found methods and topics that associate with both high- and low-quality scores. Worryingly, terms associated with educational and qualitative research attract lower quality scores in multiple areas. REF experts may rarely give high scores to qualitative or educational research because the authors tend to be less competent, because it is harder to do world leading research with these themes, or because they do not value them.Originality/value: This is the first investigation of journal article terms associating with research quality.
KW - Research assessment
KW - Research quality
KW - REF 2021
KW - Research excellence framework
KW - term frequency analysis
KW - Bibliometrics
KW - Term frequency analysis
U2 - 10.1108/JD-12-2022-0261
DO - 10.1108/JD-12-2022-0261
M3 - Article
SN - 0022-0418
VL - 79
SP - 1110
EP - 1123
JO - Journal of Documentation
JF - Journal of Documentation
IS - 5
ER -