Facilitating social and natural science cross-disciplinarity: Assessing the human and social dynamics program Article

Garner, J, Porter, AL, Borrego, M et al. (2013). Facilitating social and natural science cross-disciplinarity: Assessing the human and social dynamics program . 22(2), 134-144. 10.1093/reseval/rvt001

cited authors

  • Garner, J; Porter, AL; Borrego, M; Tran, E; Teutonico, R

authors

abstract

  • Research that integrates the social and natural sciences is vital to address many societal challenges, yet is difficult to arrange, conduct, and disseminate. This article analyses the cross-disciplinary character of the research supported by a unique US National Science Foundation program on Human and Social Dynamics (HSD). It presents evidence that research publications deriving from this support chiefly pertain to the Social and Behavioral Sciences, but extend widely into the Bio and Medical Sciences, Environmental Sciences, and Physical Sciences and Engineering. Integration scores, based on the diversity of references cited, indicate that the HSD-derived publications are notably more interdisciplinary than those of comparable programs. Diffusion scores, together with science overlay maps, show that uptake of the HSD publications extends into the natural, as well as social, sciences. Research networking analyses, together with a new composite mapping approach, point toward successful catalysis of a new research community. The measures and maps of cross-disciplinary research activity that are advanced here may prove useful in other research assessments. © 2013 The Author.

publication date

  • June 1, 2013

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 134

end page

  • 144

volume

  • 22

issue

  • 2