CommunityData:Research dissemination: Difference between revisions
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Congratulations on having your research accepted for publication! While this makes your research available to the academic community, there are several strategies you can employ to increase the impact of your work and make it more visible to a broader audience. | Congratulations on having your research accepted for publication! While this makes your research available to the academic community, there are several strategies you can employ to increase the impact of your work and make it more visible to a broader audience. | ||
Although none of the research produced by the CDSC has included all of these outputs, we've compiled a list of activities that | Although none of the research produced by the CDSC has included all of these outputs, we've compiled a list of activities that you might want to consider after publishing your work. | ||
=== 1. Open Access Publication === | === 1. Open Access Publication === |
Revision as of 19:03, 5 June 2024
Public Dissemination of Research
Overview
Congratulations on having your research accepted for publication! While this makes your research available to the academic community, there are several strategies you can employ to increase the impact of your work and make it more visible to a broader audience.
Although none of the research produced by the CDSC has included all of these outputs, we've compiled a list of activities that you might want to consider after publishing your work.
1. Open Access Publication
- OA paper/replication materials: [Link to page about our Dataverse repo]
- Ideally, you will be able to publish your paper under an open access license.
- Preprint servers: Nearly all journals and proceedings allow for some version of a document to be uploaded to preprint servers like ArXiv. You should check the agreement for the specific publication venue; sometimes this has to be a pre-reviewed version, but often it is the version before the final typesetting (i.e., the version that was accepted). We typically use ArXiv or SocArXiv.
2. Spread the Word to Key Colleagues
- Email other researchers who you think should read the work with a PDF and/or link to the OA version of the work. Consider contacting former mentors/collaborators, people whose work you cite frequently, and individuals you would like to engage with who might appreciate your new contribution.
3. Spread the Word Online
- Make it concrete, practical, and problem/solution focused (rather than focused on theory, prior research, or scientific contributions alone).
- Blog post: Our research blog has many examples. Aim for a post around 800 words that is clear, concise, and interesting enough to encourage readers to delve into the paper. Including at least one image is recommended.
- Social media: The CDSC has accounts on Mastodon and the Fediverse (social.coop).
- Explainer video: (Example: hidden costs video)
- Post to Reddit: Relevant subreddits include r/CompSocial and r/science.
4. Spread the Word to Potential Non-Scholarly "End Users"
- Make it concrete, practical, and problem/solution focused (rather than focused on theory, prior research, or scientific contributions alone).
- Presentation to community/constituent conference/gathering
- Community dialogue
- Research briefing
5. Press/Media Outreach
- Outreach to hypothetical readers/press
- University-specific press/PR folks