The Enduring Value of Social Science Research: The Use and Reuse of Primary Research Data

TitleThe Enduring Value of Social Science Research: The Use and Reuse of Primary Research Data
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2010
AuthorsPienta, A. M., Alter G. C., & Lyle J. A.
Date Published2010/11/22/
Keywordsgap_evidence, gap_relationships, sg_data_archiving, sg_data_sharing
Abstract

The goal of this paper is to examine the extent to which social science research data are shared and assess whether data sharing affects research productivity tied to the research data themselves. We construct a database from administrative records containing information about thousands of social science studies that have been conducted over the last 40 years. Included in the database are descriptions of social science data collections funded by the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health. A survey of the principal investigators of a subset of these social science awards was also conducted. We report that very few social science data collections are preserved and disseminated by an archive or institutional repository. Informal sharing of data in the social sciences is much more common. The main analysis examines publication metrics that can be tied to the research data collected with NSF and NIH funding – total publications, primary publications (including PI), and secondary publications (non-research team). Multivariate models of count of publications suggest that data sharing, especially sharing data through an archive, leads to many more times the publications than not sharing data. This finding is robust even when the models are adjusted for PI characteristics, grant award features, and institutional characteristics.

URLhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/handle/2027.42/78307

Gap Area Study Type:

High-level Gap Areas:

Purpose: 
Investigated the extent to which social science research data are shared and whether data sharing affected research productivity of the research data themselves.
Method: 
Searched NSF and NIH databases to create a database of 7,040 research projects in the social and behavioral sciences funded by NSF and NIH from 1985-2001; surveyed the 4,883 unique PIs for these projects (there was a 24.9% response rate) about research data collected, methods of sharing data, attitudes about data sharing, and demographic information