Researchers' participation in and motivations for engaging with research information management systems

PloS One
Besiki StviliaDong Joon Lee

Abstract

This article examined how researchers participated in research information management systems (RIMSs), their motivations for participation, and their priorities for those motivations. Profile maintenance, question-answering, and endorsement activities were used to define three cumulatively increasing levels of participation: Readers, Record Managers, and Community Members. Junior researchers were more engaged in RIMSs than were senior researchers. Postdocs had significantly higher odds of endorsing other researchers for skills and being categorized as Community Members than did full and associate professors. Assistant professors were significantly more likely to be Record Managers than were members of any other seniority categories. Finally, researchers from the life sciences showed a significantly higher propensity for being Community Members than Readers and Record Managers when compared with researchers from engineering and the physical sciences, respectively. When performing activities, researchers were motivated by the desire to share scholarship, feel competent, experience a sense of enjoyment, improve their status, and build ties with other members of the community. Moreover, when researchers performed activities that di...Continue Reading

References

Dec 16, 2005·Nature·Jim Giles

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Methods Mentioned

BETA
PCA

Software Mentioned

Qualtrics
REACH NC
ORCID
VIVO
ResearchGate
Scopus
Google Scholar

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