Multidisciplinary research: should effort be the measure of success?

R A Buswell, Lynda Webb, V Mitchell , K Leder Mackley

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract / Description of output

Energy demand reduction and flexible demand from dwellings will play a critical role in achieving a low carbon future. There remain many unanswered questions around the interaction of people with their environment and the technical systems that service them and as a result, multidisciplinary research is a principle component of research funding internationally. There is, however, relatively little published work that considers the operational issues in undertaking epistemologically diverse, academic research projects. This paper makes a contribution by quantifying the operational effort involved in data collection on a large multidisciplinary project and connecting the operational issues encountered to knowledge production. The paper finds that cost of the data gathering to be £46,000/home and participants can give upwards of 217 hours of their time per house, engaging with data gathering activities. The rate of knowledge production is found to be approximately 3 publication/FTE over the lifetime of the project and the risk to generating interdisciplinary insights is shown to be dependent on largely unforeseeable operational issues that compound the characteristic differences in the collection of the data utilised by social and technical research communities.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)539-555
Number of pages17
JournalBuilding Research and Information
Volume45
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 13 Jul 2016

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