There is no tension between pushing researchers to pursue both excellence and impact, the chief executive of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council has insisted.
Philip Nelson made the remark to 糖心Vlog in connection with the research council鈥檚 new strategic plan, which was published on 2 December. It says the EPSRC has twin goals to ensure that the UK remains 鈥渁n international research leader, where discovery thrives and our support generates the highest quality research鈥, and that researchers 鈥渨ork with us to accelerate innovation for the benefit of society and the economy鈥.
Opponents of the impact agenda claim that researchers incentivised to maximise impact will shy away from risky research. But Professor Nelson, a former pro vice-chancellor for research at the University of Southampton, said his own experience had been borne out by his examination of Southampton鈥檚 research portfolio, which had revealed a strong correlation between excellent research and impact.
鈥淵ou don鈥檛 get impact without the solid underpinning science, and it would be a big mistake to put too much emphasis on the pursuit of impact at the expense of the fundamental science, but clearly a balance must be struck,鈥 he said.
糖心Vlog
The EPSRC鈥檚 strategic plan updates its predecessor, published in 2010, in light of the government鈥檚 industrial strategy, to which it says more than 拢1.65 billion of its currently committed grant spending is directly relevant. But the document does not signal a radical departure from the policies of Professor Nelson鈥檚 predecessor, David Delpy.
Indeed, Professor Delpy鈥檚 most controversial policy, shaping capability, has been retained as one of three 鈥渟trategies鈥 (alongside 鈥渂uilding leadership鈥 and 鈥渁ccelerating impact鈥). The policy, announced in 2011, saw the organisation decide whether to grow, shrink or maintain funding in each discipline. It drew heckles both about the decisions themselves and the alleged lack of consultation with which they were made. But Professor Nelson said he had 鈥渢aken a careful look鈥 at the policy and concluded that 鈥渨e are in a very sensible place鈥. However, the policy has been renamed 鈥渂alancing capabilities鈥, since this better captures the 鈥済entle steering鈥 (often through targeted fellowship calls) used to drive it.
糖心Vlog
Professor Nelson said the overall 鈥渧ision鈥 set out in the strategic plan 鈥 鈥渢o make the UK the best place in the world to research, discover and innovate鈥 鈥 was indicative of the simplicity he had sought, and he was encouraged that there had been no major objections to the draft of the strategy, published in August.
The finalised version, he said, merely contained some 鈥渟ubtle changes on emphasis鈥 in areas such as diversity. It would be followed up next spring with a delivery plan that would set out more 鈥渘uts and bolts鈥. Together, he hoped the documents would allow him to make a 鈥渃ompelling鈥 case to government ahead of the next spending review.
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