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DTSTART:19700101T000000
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UID:5385115:Event:148428
DTSTAMP:20260414T192945Z
SUMMARY:Livestream: Open Access, global research impact, and tracing g
 enerations of citations
DESCRIPTION:As part of International Open Access Week, Brunel invites 
 all academics and students to a conferenceÂ which brings together indu
 stry professionals and Brunel researchers to talk about their commitme
 nt to making openness in research a reality.\nTune in to ourÂ livestre
 am to catch a talk by Dr Teresa Jones and Dr Stephen Hanney from the H
 ealth Economics Research Group\nAbstract: The World Health Organisatio
 n (WHO) promotes Open Access as a way of spreading knowledge globally 
 about health research, and increasing the chances of impacts arising. 
 For over 20 years Brunelâ€™s Health Economics Research Group (HERG) ha
 s conducted a range of studies to develop and apply the HERG Payback F
 ramework for assessing the impact from health research. The framework 
 has been applied in many countries, and weâ€™ve continued methodologic
 al development. Weâ€™ve collaborated on this with WHO, informed HEFCEâ
 €™s approach to impact case studies, and provided evidence to defend t
 he public research budget.  One stream of this research has been to ex
 amine methods of assessing the impact of health research publications 
 on clinical practice. Initially we identified the information sources 
 and journals that clinicians used to inform their clinical practice, a
 nd explored the impact factors of these journals. Then, we examined th
 e idea that citations could perhaps act like a radioactive tracer in f
 ollowing the development from an original piece of health research thr
 ough to its effects on clinical practice i.e. from bench to bedside. W
 e wanted to move beyond traditional quantitative citation analysis of 
 an individual piece of research. In a study funded by the MRC Methodol
 ogy Programme our research led us along a pathway that included both q
 uantitative and qualitative elements to citation analysis and allowed 
 us to trace important papers across generations of citations. We devel
 oped the HACT (HERG Assessment of Citations Template) and further refi
 ned it to provide a method of not only including a measure of quality 
 into the assessment but also of assessing the direct and indirect impa
 cts of a piece of health research. We conducted four case studies in t
 he area of psychiatry to test our methodology.\n\nFor more information
  visit http://legacy.openaccessweek.org/events/livestream-open-access-
 global-research-impact-and-tracing
DTSTART;TZID=Pacific/Midway:20161027T114500
DTEND;TZID=Pacific/Midway:20161027T121500
CATEGORIES:talk, online, chat, presentation
LOCATION:United Kingdom
WEBSITE:http://livestream.com/Brunel/andbeyond
URL:http://livestream.com/Brunel/andbeyond
CONTACT:
ORGANIZER;CN="Brunel University London":http://legacy.openaccessweek.o
 rg/profile/BrunelUniversityLondon
ATTACH;FMTTYPE="image/jpeg":http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/
 file/get/3057580587?profile=original
ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;PARTSTAT=ACCEPTED;RSVP=TRUE;CN="Brunel U
 niversity London":http://legacy.openaccessweek.org/profile/BrunelUnive
 rsityLondon
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