How Efficiently Do Elite US Universities Produce Highly Cited Papers?
While output and impact assessments were initially at the forefront of institutional research evaluations, efficiency measurements have become popular in recent years. Research efficiency is measured by indicators that relate research output to input. The additional consideration of research input i...
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doaj-199ad68124e04f83a48f1ab0a3cf45902020-11-24T23:48:34ZengMDPI AGPublications2304-67752019-01-0171410.3390/publications7010004publications7010004How Efficiently Do Elite US Universities Produce Highly Cited Papers?Klaus Wohlrabe0Félix de Moya Anegon1Lutz Bornmann2Ifo Institute, Poschingerstr. 5, 81679 Munich, GermanyCSIC, Institute of Public Goods and Policies (IPP) Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas C/Albasanz, 26-28 28037 Madrid, SpainDivision for Science and Innovation Studies, Administrative Headquarters of the Max Planck Society Hofgartenstr. 8, 80539 Munich, GermanyWhile output and impact assessments were initially at the forefront of institutional research evaluations, efficiency measurements have become popular in recent years. Research efficiency is measured by indicators that relate research output to input. The additional consideration of research input in research evaluation is obvious, since the output depends on the input. The present study is based on a comprehensive dataset with input and output data for 50 US universities. As input, we used research expenses, and as output the number of highly-cited papers. We employed Data Efficiency Analysis (DEA), Free Disposal Hull (FDH) and two more robust models: the order-m and order-α approaches. The results of the DEA and FDH analysis show that Harvard University and Boston College can be called especially efficient compared to the other universities. While the strength of Harvard University lies in its high output of highly-cited papers, the strength of Boston College is its small input. In the order-α and order-m frameworks, Harvard University remains efficient, but Boston College becomes super-efficient. We produced university rankings based on adjusted efficiency scores (subsequent to regression analyses), in which single covariates (e.g., the disciplinary profile) are held constant.http://www.mdpi.com/2304-6775/7/1/4universityefficiency analysispartial frontier analysisregression analysisnormalized citation impact |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Klaus Wohlrabe Félix de Moya Anegon Lutz Bornmann |
spellingShingle |
Klaus Wohlrabe Félix de Moya Anegon Lutz Bornmann How Efficiently Do Elite US Universities Produce Highly Cited Papers? Publications university efficiency analysis partial frontier analysis regression analysis normalized citation impact |
author_facet |
Klaus Wohlrabe Félix de Moya Anegon Lutz Bornmann |
author_sort |
Klaus Wohlrabe |
title |
How Efficiently Do Elite US Universities Produce Highly Cited Papers? |
title_short |
How Efficiently Do Elite US Universities Produce Highly Cited Papers? |
title_full |
How Efficiently Do Elite US Universities Produce Highly Cited Papers? |
title_fullStr |
How Efficiently Do Elite US Universities Produce Highly Cited Papers? |
title_full_unstemmed |
How Efficiently Do Elite US Universities Produce Highly Cited Papers? |
title_sort |
how efficiently do elite us universities produce highly cited papers? |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Publications |
issn |
2304-6775 |
publishDate |
2019-01-01 |
description |
While output and impact assessments were initially at the forefront of institutional research evaluations, efficiency measurements have become popular in recent years. Research efficiency is measured by indicators that relate research output to input. The additional consideration of research input in research evaluation is obvious, since the output depends on the input. The present study is based on a comprehensive dataset with input and output data for 50 US universities. As input, we used research expenses, and as output the number of highly-cited papers. We employed Data Efficiency Analysis (DEA), Free Disposal Hull (FDH) and two more robust models: the order-m and order-α approaches. The results of the DEA and FDH analysis show that Harvard University and Boston College can be called especially efficient compared to the other universities. While the strength of Harvard University lies in its high output of highly-cited papers, the strength of Boston College is its small input. In the order-α and order-m frameworks, Harvard University remains efficient, but Boston College becomes super-efficient. We produced university rankings based on adjusted efficiency scores (subsequent to regression analyses), in which single covariates (e.g., the disciplinary profile) are held constant. |
topic |
university efficiency analysis partial frontier analysis regression analysis normalized citation impact |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/2304-6775/7/1/4 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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