Artistic Research and University Research Management Practices

2017 ◽  
pp. 107-124
Author(s):  
Jenny Wilson
2005 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 245-254
Author(s):  
D. SUMITH de Z. ABEYSIRIWARDENA

Farmers themselves are allowed to manage on-farm variety adaptability trials (VATs), to represent farmer management practices in preference to research management. In this approach, within-trial uniformity and thus the scientific value of VATs will be lost. A study was conducted using rice to ascertain whether representation of farmer management in VATs is necessary and to test an approach that represents farmer management without losing within-trial uniformity and the scientific value of VATs. In the proposed approach, both the representation of farmer management and within-trial uniformity are reasonably assured through implementation of site-specific farmer practices by research personnel. This approach was compared with complete research management using recommended practices in a VAT conducted with five rice varieties in six farmers' fields over two seasons. When farmer management was implemented by research personnel, popular varieties among farmers were judged most adaptable. However, when VATs were managed using recommended practices, popular varieties among farmers were judged least adaptable. This provided direct evidence to show the usefulness of representation of farmer management and the validity and practical feasibility of the proposed approach in managing VATs.


2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 436-456 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristina Alcaide-Muñoz ◽  
Leopoldo J. Gutierrez-Gutierrez

Purpose The aim of this paper is to analyse the relationship between Six Sigma methodology and organisational ambidexterity (exploitation and exploration orientations). For this purpose, this study describes how Six Sigma practices may enhance both orientations simultaneously, contributing to organisational ambidexterity and performance improvements. Design/methodology/approach A systematic literature review was adopted as the research methodology. The authors analysed 512 publications in Social Science Citation Index journals in fields such as management, business, operation research management science, planning development, behavioural sciences, interdisciplinary social sciences and applied psychology from 1987 to 2016, as the first development and adoption of Six Sigma was in 1987 by Motorola. Findings This analysis describes how Six Sigma emphasises not only useful practices for exploitation orientation, such as customer input, design for manufacturability or improvement and control of processes, but also explorative practices, such as discovery, novelty or innovation. Consequently, an adequate combination of all these practices may enhance organisational ambidexterity and organisational success. Research limitations/implications This study relies exclusively on previously published literature that fulfilled the selection criteria described in the search methodology. Further empirical research is necessary to test the propositions included in this paper. Practical implications This study has important implications for academics, practitioners and employers, as it furnishes new theoretical insights to the scarce literature that studies the relationship between quality management practices and organisational ambidexterity. The authors provide a better understanding of Six Sigma philosophy and some fresh and new insight on how Six Sigma practices may help organisation develop distinctive competitive competences by its influence over exploration and exploitation orientations (ambidexterity). Therefore, it might be of interest to those practitioners interested in achieving a successful competitive position and discover emerging business opportunities, as it may provide some guidance on the important implication of Six Sigma practices over exploration and exploitation orientations. Originality/value This study provides new insights into the non-existent literature about Six Sigma and organisational ambidexterity and to the scarce literature about quality management and ambidexterity. Propositions on how Six Sigma practices benefit organisational ambidexterity are also suggested.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olivier Klein ◽  
Tom Elis Hardwicke ◽  
Frederik Aust ◽  
Johannes Breuer ◽  
Henrik Danielsson ◽  
...  

The credibility of scientific claims depends upon the transparency of the research products upon which they are based (e.g., study protocols, data, materials, and analysis scripts). As psychology navigates a period of unprecedented introspection, user-friendly tools and services that support open science have flourished. There has never been a better time to embrace transparent research practices. However, the plethora of decisions and choices involved can be bewildering. Here we provide a practical guide to help researchers navigate the process of preparing and sharing the products of their research. Being an open scientist means adopting a few straightforward research management practices, which lead to less error prone, reproducible research workflows. Further, this adoption can be piecemeal – each incremental step towards complete transparency adds positive value. Transparent research practices not only improve the efficiency of individual researchers, they enhance the credibility of the knowledge generated by the scientific community.


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