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UK Research Evaluation Framework: Validate Metrics Against Panel Rankings
** Cross-Posted** Fully Hyperlinked version of this posting:
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/333-guid.html
SUMMARY: Three things need to be remedied in the UK's proposed
HEFCE/RAE Research Evaluation Framework:
http://www.hefce.ac.uk/pubs/hefce/2007/07_34/
(1) Ensure as broad, rich, diverse and forward-looking a
battery of candidate metrics as possible -- especially online
metrics -- in all disciplines.
(2) Make sure to cross-validate them against the panel
rankings in the last parallel panel/metric RAE in 2008. The
initialized weights can then be fine-tuned and optimized by peer
panels in ensuing years.
(3) Stress that it is important -- indeed imperative -- that
all University Institutional Repositories (IRs) now get serious
about systematically archiving all their research output assets
(especially publications) so they can be counted and assessed (as
well as accessed!), along with their IR metrics (downloads,
links, growth/decay rates, harvested citation counts, etc.).
If these three things are systematically done -- (1)
comprehensive metrics, (2) cross-validation and calibration of
weightings, and (3) a systematic distributed IR database from
which to harvest them -- continuous scientometric assessment of
research will be well on its way worldwide, making research
progress and impact more measurable and creditable, while at the
same time accelerating and enhancing it. Once one sees the whole
report, it turns out that the HEFCE/RAE Research Evaluation
Framework is far better, far more flexible, and far more
comprehensive than is reflected in either the press release or
the Executive Summary.
It appears that there is indeed the intention to use many more
metrics than the three named in the executive summary (citations,
funding, students), that the metrics will be weighted field by
field, and that there is considerable open-mindedness about
further metrics and about corrections and fine-tuning with time.
Even for the humanities and social sciences, where "light touch"
panel review will be retained for the time being, metrics too
will be tried and tested.
This is all very good, and an excellent example for other
nations, such as Australia (also considering national research
assessment with its Research Quality Framework), the US (not very
advanced yet, but no doubt listening) and the rest of Europe
(also listening, and planning measures of its own, such as
EurOpenScholar).
There is still one prominent omission, however, and it is a
crucial one:
The UK is conducting one last parallel metrics/panel RAE in 2008.
That is the last and best chance to test and validate the
candidate metrics -- as rich and diverse a battery of them as
possible -- against the panel rankings. In all other fields of
metrics -- biometrics, psychometrics, even weather forecasting
metrics ? before deployment the metric predictors first need to
be tested and shown to be valid, which means showing that they do
indeed predict what they were intended to predict. That means
they must correlate with a "criterion" metric that has already
been validated, or that has "face-validity" of some kind.
The RAE has been using the panel rankings for two decades now (at
a great cost in wasted time and effort to the entire UK research
community -- time and effort that could instead have been used to
conduct the research that the RAE was evaluating: this is what
the metric RAE is primarily intended to remedy).
But if the panel rankings have been unquestioningly relied upon
for 2 decades already, then they are a natural criterion against
which the new battery of metrics can be validated, initializing
the weights of each metric within a joint battery, as a function
of what percentage of the variation in the panel rankings each
metric can predict.
This is called "multiple regression" analysis: N "predictors" are
jointly correlated with one (or more) "criterion" (in this case
the panel rankings, but other validated or face-valid criteria
could also be added, if there were any). The result is a set of
"beta" weights on each of the metrics, reflecting their
individual predictive power, in predicting the criterion (panel
rankings). The weights will of course differ from discipline by
discipline.
Now these beta weights can be taken as an initialization of the
metric battery. With time, "super-light" panel oversight can be
used to fine-tune and optimize those weightings (and new metrics
can always be added too), to correct errors and anomalies and
make them reflect the values of each discipline.
(The weights can also be systematically varied to use the metrics
to re-rank in terms of different blends of criteria that might be
relevant for different decisions: RAE top-sliced funding is one
sort of decision, but one might sometimes want to rank in terms
of contributions to education, to industry, to internationality,
to interdisciplinarity. Metrics can be calibrated continuously
and can generate different "views" depending on what is being
evaluated. But, unlike the much abused "university league table,"
which ranks on one metric at a time (and often a subjective
opinion-based rather than an objective one), the RAE metrics
could generate different views simply by changing the weights on
some selected metrics, while retaining the other metrics as the
baseline context and frame of reference.)
To accomplish all that, however, the metric battery needs to be
rich and diverse, and the weight of each metric in the battery
has to be initialised in a joint multiple regression on the panel
rankings. It is very much to be hoped that HEFCE will commission
this all-important validation exercise on the invaluable and
unprecedented database they will have with the unique, one-time
parallel panel/ranking RAE in 2008.
That is the main point. There are also some less central points:
The report says -- a priori -- that REF will not consider journal
impact factors (average citations per journal), nor author impact
(average citations per author): only average citations per paper,
per department. This is a mistake. In a metric battery, these
other metrics can be included, to test whether they make any
independent contribution to the predictivity of the battery. The
same applies to author publication counts, number of publishing
years, number of co-authors -- even to impact before the
evaluation period. (Possibly included vs. non-included staff
research output could be treated in a similar way, with number
and proportion of staff included also being metrics.)
The large battery of jointly validated and weighted metrics will
make it possible to correct the potential bias from relying too
heavily on prior funding, even if it is highly correlated with
the panel rankings, in order to avoid a self-fulfilling prophecy
which would simply collapse the Dual RAE/RCUK funding system into
just a multiplier on prior RCUK funding.
Self-citations should not be simply excluded: they should be
included independently in the metric battery, for validation. So
should measures of the size of the citation circle (endogamy) and
degree of interdisciplinarity.
Nor should the metric battery omit the newest and some of the
most important metrics of all, the online, web-based ones:
downloads of papers, links, growth rates, decay rates,
hub/authority scores. All of these will be provided by the UK's
growing network of UK Institutional Repositories. These will be
the record-keepers -- for both the papers and their usage metrics
-- and the access-providers, thereby maximizing their usage
metrics.
REF should put much, much more emphasis on ensuring that the UK
network of Institutional Repositories systematically and
comprehensively records its research output and its metric
performance indicators.
But overall, thumbs up for a promising initiative that is likely
to serve as a useful model for the rest of the research world in
the online era.
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