糖心Vlog

How Covid-19 is reshaping international research collaboration

Three recent studies have unearthed interesting patterns by comparing cross-border working before and during the pandemic

Published on
August 3, 2020
Last updated
August 7, 2020
A woman wearing face mask walks past a mural depicting of a healthcare worker and a world map with flags on walls
Source: Getty
A woman wearing face mask walks past a mural depicting of a healthcare worker and a world map with flags on walls

Before the coronavirus pandemic, international research collaboration was already becoming a major focus of attention for scholars and policymakers wanting to understand the interplay between science and cross-border cooperation.

In the main, such collaboration between academics across the globe was accepted as a desirable goal that could boost the citation impact of work and accelerate progress.

But Covid-19, and its disruption to international travel, has caused a profound shock to the international network of scholars, whose collaborations were often sparked by chance meetings at conferences or scientists travelling far across the globe for new posts in other countries.

It may still take some time before the true impact of this is known, but early data on collaboration since the pandemic hit听are starting to emerge and may give some comfort that scientists 鈥 possibly spurred by the global nature of the crisis 鈥 are continuing to seek to work with colleagues far and wide. However, the data are also revealing interesting subtleties around the collaboration that has been taking place.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Two peer-reviewed studies and a preprint published in the past few weeks in particular听offer some insight into collaboration in the first few months of the crisis.

, involving authors based in the US, China and Australia, analysed publications on coronaviruses, including those associated with other illnesses听such as Sars and Mers, in the two years before the pandemic and from January to April this year.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Range of collaborations before and after graph

Although the study inevitably found that the countries that were first to feel the impact of the pandemic,听such as China, had boosted their share of research on coronaviruses, other interesting patterns also emerged.

These included an apparent narrowing in the number of authors and countries involved in such research, a strengthening of the research ties between China and the US, and a potential drop-off in the involvement of smaller and developing nations.

The paper, published in the journal 笔濒辞蝉听翱苍别, says the findings 鈥渟uggest that the global Covid-19 pandemic shifted the geographic loci of coronavirus research, as well as the structure of scientific teams, narrowing team membership and favouring elite structures鈥.

One of the paper鈥檚 authors, Caroline Wagner, the Milton听and Roslyn Wolf chair in international affairs at Ohio State University, said it was important to remember that the study reflected 鈥渋nternational collaboration as it responds to a shock鈥 and the 鈥渟cramble鈥 among scientists in the early days to听discover more about the virus.

Although Chinese researchers 鈥渞eacted first and rapidly鈥, the data suggest that US researchers, individually and then in teams, and other major research nations such as the UK became more and more involved as time went on.

Professor Wagner said the research鈥檚 finding that there had been a 鈥渢endency for elites to connect with each other鈥 was also a feature of collaboration before the pandemic.

But the data do suggest that involvement from developing countries dropped in the pandemic period (just 11听per cent of papers had an author from a country outside Europe, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development and China) and the average number of nations on each peer-reviewed paper fell overall.

Meanwhile, the share of papers featuring authors from both the US and China听grew from 3.6听per cent to 4.9听per cent.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

This theme of the US and China seemingly strengthening research ties during the pandemic, or at least not loosening them听because听of听any geopolitical tensions, is also picked up in other research on collaboration during the pandemic.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Two researchers from the Center for the Study of 糖心Vlog at the University of Arizona looked at international collaboration patterns in research specifically on Covid-19, compared with cross-border working generally in the years before the pandemic.

One of their main overall findings, in a published in the journal 糖心Vlog, was that international collaboration on Covid-19 research from January to May this year was much higher than for articles published in the five years before: more than a third (34听per cent) of Covid-19 papers featured cross-border working, compared with 23听per cent听in the period听2015-19.

The pandemic appears not to have dented non-Covid collaboration this year either, which was at 28听per cent.

However, there are interesting variations among countries. Several major research nations had a higher level of collaboration on Covid papers published this year, but China鈥檚 collaboration percentage was slightly lower (20听per cent compared with 22听per cent听in 2015-19 and 25听per cent for non-Covid 2020 papers), a leaning towards domestic output in China that has also been suggested in other collaboration studies.

An additional by the same authors, Jenny Lee and John Haupt, published on Research Square, also found that the US and China were among three countries (the other being Mexico) that tended to collaborate with authors from fewer than three other countries on Covid-19 papers, suggesting that their internationally co-authored research 鈥渢ended to be bilateral鈥. In all, almost half of all China鈥檚 international collaboration on Covid-19 featured a US author.

Changes in International cooperation since outbreak graph

Professor Lee, who published a separate study last year on the growing research ties between the countries, said she had found it interesting 鈥渢hat despite the mounting geopolitical tensions between the two countries, scientists from the US and China are collaborating together, even more than prior to the pandemic鈥. This 鈥渢ells us that scientists are especially prone to coming together in addressing global crises鈥, she added.

However, it was hard to tell whether this heightened collaboration was听a result of听the profound shock of the pandemic and the urgent desire for knowledge about Covid-19 and whether geopolitical tensions would come into play in the future.

鈥淭he pressing need for global solutions to Covid-19 appears to have triggered heightened scientific cooperation, but policies that discourage immigration, ban funding sources and monitor scientists as potential spies obviously make collaboration across borders difficult,鈥 she said.

Professor Wagner also said the longer-term picture on collaboration was uncertain, but she said challenges would include reigniting new networks and bringing emerging countries back into the fold.

鈥淩ight now, mobility is severely constrained, so this obstacle will likely hinder the initiation of collaborations,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his 鈥榞ap year鈥 may also harm novelty, since new ideas are born in the churn of people and ideas that lead to breakthroughs, discoveries and novel recombinations.

鈥淎lso of concern is the rapid drop-off of developing countries from Covid-19 international collaborations. A听collective policy effort may be needed to bring developing country participants back into international collaboration.鈥

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

simon.baker@timeshighereducation.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline:Boundary-busting virus reshapes cross-border efforts

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT