An FWCI decomposition of Science Foundation Ireland funding

Abstract

In response to the 2008 global financial crisis, Science Foundation Ireland (SFI), now Research Ireland, pivoted to research with potential socioeconomic impact. Given that the latter can encompass higher technology readiness levels, which typically correlates with lower academic impact, it is interesting to understand how academic impact holds up in SFI funded research. Here we decompose SFI Investigator Awards - arguably the most academic funding call - into 3,243 constituent publications and field weighted citation impact (FWCI) values searchable in the SCOPUS database. Given that citation counts are skewed, we highlight the limitation of FWCI as a paper metric, which naively restricts one to comparisons of average FWCI (FWCI) in large samples. Neglecting publications with FWCI < 0.1 (8.8\%), SFI funded publications are well approximated by a lognormal distribution with μ = -0.0761+0.017-0.0039 and σ = 0.933+0.011-0.012 at 95 \% confidence level. This equates to an FWCI = 1.433+0.029-0.015 well above FWCI=1 internationally. Broken down by award, we correct FWCI for small samples using simulations and find 67\% exceed median international academic interest, thus exhibiting a positive correlation between the potential for socioeconomic impact and academic interest.

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