Collaboration

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences

Kinds of Collaboration

  • close collaboration
  • cochrane collaboration
  • de collaboration
  • educational collaboration
  • effective collaboration
  • enhanced collaboration
  • future collaboration
  • good collaboration
  • greater collaboration
  • increased collaboration
  • inter-organizational collaboration
  • interagency collaboration
  • interdisciplinary collaboration
  • international collaboration
  • interprofessional collaboration
  • multicentre collaboration
  • multidisciplinary collaboration
  • multiprofessional collaboration
  • nurse collaboration
  • research collaboration
  • scientific collaboration
  • successful collaboration


  • Selected Abstracts


    BEYOND POLITICS AND POSITIONS: A CALL FOR COLLABORATION BETWEEN FAMILY COURT AND DOMESTIC VIOLENCE PROFESSIONALS

    FAMILY COURT REVIEW, Issue 3 2008
    Peter Salem
    The domestic violence advocacy and family court communities have each grown dramatically over the last three decades. Although these professional communities share many values in common, they often find themselves at odds with one another on a host of issues. This article examines the practical, political, definitional, and ideological differences between the two communities and calls for them to join forces and collaborate on behalf of children and families. [source]


    MODELS OF COLLABORATION IN FAMILY LAW

    FAMILY COURT REVIEW, Issue 2 2004
    Gregory Firestone
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Medication errors in older people with mental health problems: a review

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY, Issue 6 2008
    Ian D Maidment
    Abstract Objective To review and summarise published data on medication errors in older people with mental health problems. Methods A systematic review was conducted to identify studies that investigated medication errors in older people with mental health problems. MEDLINE, EMBASE, PHARMLINE, COCHRANE COLLABORATION and PsycINFO were searched electronically. Any studies identified were scrutinized for further references. The title, abstract or full text was systematically reviewed for relevance. Results Data were extracted from eight studies. In total, information about 728 errors (459 administration, 248 prescribing, 7 dispensing, 12 transcribing, 2 unclassified) was available. The dataset related almost exclusively to inpatients, frequently involved non-psychotropics, and the majority of the errors were not serious. Conclusions Due to methodology issues it was impossible to calculate overall error rates. Future research should concentrate on serious errors within community settings, and clarify potential risk factors. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    GERIATRIC FELLOWSHIP COLLABORATION: A MUST FOR THE ACCREDITATION COUNCIL FOR GRADUATE MEDICAL EDUCATION

    JOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 11 2008
    FAAFP, H. Bruce Vogt MD
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    SCHOLARLY COLLABORATION AND PRODUCTIVITY PATTERNS IN PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION: ANALYSING RECENT TRENDS

    PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION, Issue 3 2010
    ELIZABETH A. CORLEY
    Previous studies have confirmed the interdisciplinary nature of the field of public administration (Mosher 1956; Ventriss 1991; Forrester 1996; Rodgers and Rodgers 2000; Schroeder et al. 2004) and encouraged the exploration of one important indicator of interdisciplinarity: research collaboration. One way that collaboration patterns are explored is through the study of co-authorship among faculty members (Smart and Bayer 1986; Forrester 1996; Katz and Martin 1997). In the field of public administration, studies on co-authorship and productivity of scholars are sparse. In this article, we use bibliometric data to explore collaboration patterns as they relate to productivity levels and quality of publications within the field of public administration. Our study finds that more productive scholars, as well as those with the highest impact, are less likely to collaborate than their colleagues. Our results also indicate that there are gender differences in collaboration patterns and productivity within the field of public administration. [source]


    DISPARATE POWER AND DISPARATE RESOURCES: COLLABORATION BETWEEN FAITH-BASED AND ACTIVIST ORGANIZATIONS FOR CENTRAL FLORIDA FARMWORKERS

    ANNALS OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL PRACTICE, Issue 1 2010
    Nolan Kline
    This article highlights the collaboration between an evangelical faith-based organization and secular activist organization to address the oral health needs of African American former farmworkers in Central Florida. Highlighting the FBO's evangelistic agenda, I discuss one FBO as a charitable health care provider filling a service gap within the broader health care system. In addition, I discuss the organizations' different levels of access to powerful agents of change, and the role of the anthropologist as an intermediary between the FBO and secular organization. This article first details the health concerns of the former farmworker population in Central Florida as they relate to farm labor and living in an environmentally harmful area. It then sheds light on systematic health care constraints in the United States that necessitate intervention from faith-based organizations and secular activist organizations. Last, this article provides a case study of how an anthropologist, acting as an intermediary to connect a faith-based group with an activist group, helped address one specific health need for former migrant farmworkers. [source]


    ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH AT THE INSTITUTE OF NUCLEAR TECHNIQUES, BUDAPEST UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY AND ECONOMICS: SCHOLARLY ACHIEVEMENTS OF A PROSPEROUS LONG-TERM COLLABORATION

    ARCHAEOMETRY, Issue 2 2007
    M. BALLA
    The laboratory is part of a university institute with a nuclear reactor on the premises. NAA of archaeological materials started in the early 1980s, and has found continuous interest since then. Site-specific characteristics of the NAA procedure are the long irradiation and counting times, due to the relatively low neutron flux, the single comparator method of standardization and the use of reference materials for quality control. The main research interest focuses on provenance studies of potteries; 90% of the analysed samples are ceramic materials. Most of the projects concentrate on the investigation of pottery finds from Roman Pannonia, and from different archaeological sites in Israel. The Qumran pottery project is presented as a typical example. [source]


    Movie Making at Pixar: A Collaboration of Art and Technology

    COMPUTER GRAPHICS FORUM, Issue 3 2005
    Rob Cook
    This talk takes you behind the scenes at Pixar Animation Studios for an in-depth look at how its 3d computer graphics films are made. Making a computer animated film involves people with artistic talent and people with technical skills working together in close collaboration. The process starts with the development of the story and continues with modeling the geometry, adding articulation controls, using those controls to animate the characters, simulating things like water and cloth and hair, defining the look of the surfaces, putting lights in the scene, adding special effects, rendering, and post-production. Special emphasis is given to the roles of technology and computer graphics research in supporting the filmmaker. [source]


    Scene-Graph-As-Bus: Collaboration between Heterogeneous Stand-alone 3-D Graphical Applications

    COMPUTER GRAPHICS FORUM, Issue 3 2000
    Bob Zeleznik
    We describe the Scene-Graph-As-Bus technique (SGAB), the first step in a staircase of solutions for sharing software components for virtual environments. The goals of SGAB are to allow, with minimal effort, independently-designed applications to share component functionality; and for multiple users to share applications designed for single users. This paper reports on the SGAB design for transparently conjoining different applications by unifying the state information contained in their scene graphs. SGAB monitors and maps changes in the local scene graph of one application to a neutral scene graph representation (NSG), distributes the NSG changes over the network to remote peer applications, and then maps the NSG changes to the local scene graph of the remote application. The fundamental contribution of SGAB is that both the local and remote applications can be completely unaware of each other; that is, both applications can interoperate without code or binary modification despite each having no knowledge of networking or interoperability. [source]


    Sustainable supply chain management and inter-organizational resources: a literature review

    CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, Issue 4 2010
    Stefan Gold
    Abstract On the basis of a content analysis, this paper explores the role of sustainable supply chain management as a catalyst of generating valuable inter-organizational resources and thus possible sustained inter-firm competitive advantage through collaboration on environmental and social issues. Drawing on the resource-based view and its extension, the relational view, this paper highlights that partner-focused supply management capabilities evolve to corporate core competences as competition shifts from an inter-firm to an inter-supply-chain level. The ,collaborative paradigm' in supply chain management regards strategic collaboration as a crucial source of competitive advantage. Collaboration is even more essential when supply chains aim at ensuring simultaneously economic, environmental and social performance on a product's total life-cycle basis. Inter-firm resources and capabilities emerging from supply-chain-wide collaboration are prone to become sources of sustained inter-firm competitive advantage, since they are socially complex, causally ambiguous and historically grown and hence particularly difficult to imitate by competitors. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment. [source]


    Business partnerships with nonprofits: working to solve mutual problems in New Zealand,

    CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, Issue 6 2009
    Gabriel Eweje
    Abstract This paper examines partnerships between business organizations and nonprofits. Collaboration is becoming increasingly essential as organizations grow in both size and influence, and public pressure intensifies for organizations to address pressing social issues and environmental concerns. Social partnerships between business and nonprofits are widely promoted as an important new strategy which will bring significant benefits to society. A key concern in business/nonprofits collaboration is how organizations might collaborate to achieve mutually beneficial objectives that also align with corporate social responsibility. This research seeks to extend our understanding of social partnerships using an unexamined contextual setting , New Zealand. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment. [source]


    Inter,organisational Relationships in the Worldwide Popular Recorded Music Industry

    CREATIVITY AND INNOVATION MANAGEMENT, Issue 4 2002
    Jonathan Gander
    This paper analyses the worldwide popular recorded music industry and examines how product, firm and industry features result in key resources coagulating around the two firm types; the major and independent. We argue that these firm specific resources are complementary and participating firms would benefit from their union. However though complementary, they are inimical and close association risks damaging their value. Collaboration between the two firm types that hold these resources therefore needs to be designed not along traditional concerns of protection from opportunism, or the requirement to control key resources. Instead competitive advantage may be gained by designing and managing structural relationships that protect each partner's resource set from the hostile elements of the others; a contamination rather than an appropriation focus. [source]


    NGOs, Local Government, and Agrarian Civil Society: A Case of Evolving Collaboration from Southern Peru

    CULTURE, AGRICULTURE, FOOD & ENVIRONMENT, Issue 1 2001
    Assistant Professor Lisa Markowitz
    First page of article [source]


    A Case for Being Awake: Buddhism, Collaboration, and Museum Practice

    CURATOR THE MUSEUM JOURNAL, Issue 3 2006
    Marla C. Berns
    First page of article [source]


    A systematic review of the diagnostic classifications of traumatic dental injuries

    DENTAL TRAUMATOLOGY, Issue 2 2006
    Karla Maria Pugliesi da Costa Feliciano
    Abstract,,, A systematic review of the literature was undertaken to evaluate the criteria used for the diagnostic classification of traumatic dental injuries from an epidemiological standpoint. The methodology used was that suggested by the Cochrane Collaboration and the National Health Service. A total of 12 electronic bibliographical databases (BBO, BioMed Central, Blackwell Synergy, Cochrane, DARE, EMBASE, HighWire, LILACS, MEDLINE, PubMed Central, SciELO, SciSearch) and the World Wide Web were searched. There was no attempt to specify the strategy in relation to date, study design, or language. The last search was performed in May 2003. Two reviewers screened each record independently for eligibility by examining titles, abstracts, keywords and using a standardized reference form. Disagreements were resolved through consensus. The final study collection consisted of 164 articles, from 1936 to 2003, and the population sample ranged from 38 to 210 500 patients. 54 distinct classification systems were identified. According to the literature, the most frequently used classification system was that of Andreasen (32%); as regards the type of injury, the uncomplicated crown fracture was the most mentioned lesion (88.5%). Evidence supports the fact that there is no suitable system for establishing the diagnosis of the studied injuries that could be applied to epidemiological surveys. [source]


    A review of studies describing the use of acetyl cholinesterase inhibitors in Parkinson's disease dementia

    ACTA PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 6 2005
    I. D. Maidment
    Objective:, To review the literature relating to the use of acetyl cholinesterase inhibitors in Parkinson's disease dementia (PDD). Method:, MEDLINE (1966 , December 2004), PsychINFO (1972 , December 2004), EMBASE (1980 , December 2004), CINHAL (1982 , December 2004), and the Cochrane Collaboration were searched in December 2004. Results:, Three controlled trials and seven open studies were identified. Efficacy was assessed in three key domains: cognitive, neuropsychiatric and parkinsonian symptoms. Conclusion:, Cholinesterase inhibitors have a moderate effect against cognitive symptoms. There is no clear evidence of a noticeable clinical effect against neuropsychiatric symptoms. Tolerability including exacerbation of motor symptoms , in particular tremor , may limit the utility of cholinesterase inhibitors. [source]


    Culturally appropriate health education for Type 2 diabetes in ethnic minority groups: a systematic and narrative review of randomized controlled trials

    DIABETIC MEDICINE, Issue 6 2010
    K. Hawthorne
    Diabet. Med. 27, 613,623 (2010) Abstract To determine if culturally appropriate health education is more effective than ,usual' health education for people with diabetes from ethnic minority groups living in high- and upper-middle-income countries. A systematic review with meta-analysis, following the methodology of the Cochrane Collaboration. Electronic literature searches of nine databases were made, with hand searching of three journals and 16 author contacts. The criteria for inclusion into the analysis were randomized controlled trials of a specified diabetes health education intervention, and a named ethnic minority group with Type 2 diabetes. Data were collected on HbA1c, blood pressure, and quality-of-life measures. A narrative review was also performed. Few studies fitted the selection criteria, and were heterogeneous in methodologies and outcome measures, making meta-analysis difficult. HbA1c showed an improvement at 3 months [weighted mean difference (WMD) ,0.32%, 95% confidence interval (CI) ,0.63, ,0.01] and 6 months post intervention (WMD ,0.60%, 95% CI ,0.85, ,0.35). Knowledge scores also improved in the intervention groups at 6 months (standardized mean difference 0.46, 95% CI 0.27, 0.65). There was only one longer-term follow-up study, and one formal cost-effectiveness analysis. Culturally appropriate health education was more effective than ,usual' health education in improving HbA1c and knowledge in the short to medium term. Due to poor standardization between studies, the data did not allow determination of the key elements of interventions across countries, ethnic groups and health systems, or a broad view of their cost-effectiveness. The narrative review identifies learning points to direct future research. [source]


    Changing role of in vivo models in columnar-lined lower esophagus

    DISEASES OF THE ESOPHAGUS, Issue 4 2002
    Y. Koak
    SUMMARY. Columnar-lined lower esophagus (CLE) or Barrett's esophagus (BE) is caused by chronic reflux of the gastrointestinal tract and can progress to invasive adenocarcinoma. However, the pathophysiology, cell of origin, and management of this condition is incompletely understood. This review evaluates the role of in vivo models in resolving these debates. A search was performed on the Ovid and Pub Medline for 1964,2001 and Cochrane Collaboration. The keywords used were adenocarcinoma, animal model, Barrett's esophagus, columnar-lined esophagus, eosophageal neoplasms, and esophageal carcinogenesis. All relevant papers were scrutinized and an attempt at tabulation was made. In vivo models have been used at several stages of debate on the pathophysiology of BE. They provide conclusive evidence for its acquired nature secondary to duodenogastroesophageal reflux. The cell of origin of experimental BE may arise from adjacent columnar epithelium, basal layer multipotent cells, or esophageal glands. Experimental work on BE is lacking in assessing therapeutic modalities. [source]


    Does opioid substitution treatment in prisons reduce injecting-related HIV risk behaviours?

    ADDICTION, Issue 2 2010
    A systematic review
    ABSTRACT Objectives To review systematically the evidence on opioid substitution treatment (OST) in prisons in reducing injecting-related human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) risk behaviours. Methods Systematic review in accordance with guidelines of the Cochrane Collaboration. Electronic databases were searched to identify studies of prison-based opioid substitution treatment programmes that included assessment of effects of prison OST on injecting drug use, sharing of needles and syringes and HIV incidence. Published data were used to calculate risk ratios for outcomes of interest. Risk ratios were not pooled due to the low number of studies and differences in study designs. Results Five studies were included in the review. Poor follow-up rates were reported in two studies, and representativeness of the sample was uncertain in the remaining three studies. Compared to inmates in control conditions, for treated inmates the risk of injecting drug use was reduced by 55,75% and risk of needle and syringe sharing was reduced by 47,73%. No study reported a direct effect of prison OST on HIV incidence. Conclusions There may be a role for OST in preventing HIV transmission in prisons, but methodologically rigorous research addressing this question specifically is required. OST should be implemented in prisons as part of comprehensive HIV prevention programmes that also provide condoms and sterile injecting and tattooing equipment. [source]


    Partnering with Mediators: A Collaboration That Works

    EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS TODAY, Issue 3 2001
    Ann L. Begler
    First page of article [source]


    Facts, fantasies and fun in epithelial physiology

    EXPERIMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 3 2008
    C. A. R. Boyd
    The hallmark of epithelial cells is their functional polarization. It is those membrane proteins that are distributed differentially, either to the apical or to the basal surface, that determine epithelial physiology. Such proteins will include ,pumps', ,channels' and ,carriers', and it is the functional interplay between the actions of these molecules that allows the specific properties of the epithelium to emerge. Epithelial properties will additionally depend on: (a) the extent to which there may be a route between adjacent cells (the ,paracellular' route); and (b) the folding of the epithelium (as, for example, in the loop of Henle). As for other transporters, there is polarized distribution of amino-acid carriers; the molecular basis of these is of considerable current interest with regard to function, including ,inborn errors' (amino-acidurias); some of these transporters have additional functions, such as in the regulation of cell fusion, in modulating cell adherence and in activating intracellular signalling pathways. Collaboration of physiologists with fly geneticists has generated new insights into epithelial function. One example is the finding that certain amino-acid transporters may act as ,transceptors' and play a role as sensors of the extracellular environment that then regulate intracellular pathways controlling cell growth. [source]


    A Mediation Model of Interparental Collaboration, Parenting Practices, and Child Externalizing Behavior in a Clinical Sample

    FAMILY RELATIONS, Issue 3 2009
    John Kjøbli
    The present study examined maternal and paternal parenting practices as mediators of the link between interparental collaboration and children's externalizing behavior. Parent gender was tested as a moderator of the associations. A clinical sample consisting of 136 children with externalizing problems and their families participated in the study. Structural equation modeling was used to test the study hypotheses. Maternal and paternal parenting practices fully mediated the relation between interparental collaboration and externalizing behavior. When the mediated pathways were tested separately, paternal parenting practices functioned as a mediator, whereas maternal parenting practices did not, indicating that the relationship between interparental collaboration, parenting practices and externalizing behavior was moderated by parent gender. The findings suggest that treatments aimed at reducing child externalizing behavior may be strengthened by focusing on interparental collaboration in addition to parenting practices, while also underscoring the need to involve fathers in interventions. [source]


    Collaboration of a dentist and speech-language pathologist in the rehabilitation of a stroke patient with dysarthria: a case study

    GERODONTOLOGY, Issue 2 2005
    Takahiro Ono
    Objective:, To elucidate the effectiveness of the collaboration of a dentist and speech-language pathologist (SLP) in the rehabilitation of a stroke patient with dysarthria. Design:, A clinical case report treated in the rehabilitation hospital and dental surgery. Subject:, A 71-year-old Japanese man who was admitted to the rehabilitation hospital for speech rehabilitation 2 years and 5 months after a stroke. Methods:, Provision of prosthesis (palatal lift prosthesis + palatal augmentation prosthesis) for improving velopharyngeal incompetence (VPI) and articulation by dentist, and speech behavioural management by SLP including self-monitoring and bio-feedback training using the See-Scape. Results:, Speech behavioural management proved useful for promoting improvement in speech intelligibility to a functionally sufficient level after improving VPI by prosthesis. Conclusion:, The collaborative efforts of the dentist and SLP in the rehabilitation of post-stroke patients with velopharyngeal incompetence should be encouraged. [source]


    Collaboration in the future workplace

    GLOBAL BUSINESS AND ORGANIZATIONAL EXCELLENCE, Issue 2 2002
    Mike Uretsky
    [source]


    Collaboration, facilities and communities in day care services for older people

    HEALTH & SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY, Issue 1 2001
    Sarah Burch BA
    Abstract Collaborative working in care for older people is often seen as a desirable goal. However, there can be problems with this approach. This paper reports on a single blind randomized controlled trial which was carried out to compare outcomes of rehabilitation in two settings: a day hospital and social services day centres augmented by visiting therapists. The subjects were 105 older patients. Principal outcome measures were the Barthel Index, Philadelphia Geriatric Centre Morale Scale and the Caregiver Strain Index. Two aspects of the trial are examined here. Firstly, we investigated whether trial patients were more disabled than regular day centre attendees. Levels of health and well being amongst trial patients were compared with those of a random sample of 20 regular attendees from both of the participating day centres and an additional voluntary sector day centre. Secondly, key staff from the different settings were interviewed to assess how well the day centre model had worked in practice. Trial patients were significantly more disabled than regular day centre attendees according to the Barthel Index (P < 0.001), but this difference was no longer significant after three months of treatment. The day centre model had several problems, principally discharge policy, acceptability, facilities and attitudes of staff and regular attendees. Positive aspects of the day centre model, as well as successful rehabilitation, included shared skills, knowledge and resources. This paper suggests that collaborative working in day centres requires multipurpose facilities. If health staff maintain a permanent presence, benefits can include improved joint working, easier access to health care and the use of rehabilitative therapy as a preventative strategy. Day care settings can be analyzed as representing different types of communities. Allowing older users a greater degree of choice in facilities may increase the acceptability of care. [source]


    Development and Validation of a Risk-Adjustment Tool in Acute Asthma

    HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, Issue 5p1 2009
    Chu-Lin Tsai
    Objective. To develop and prospectively validate a risk-adjustment tool in acute asthma. Data Sources. Data were obtained from two large studies on acute asthma, the Multicenter Airway Research Collaboration (MARC) and the National Emergency Department Safety Study (NEDSS) cohorts. Both studies involved >60 emergency departments (EDs) and were performed during 1996,2001 and 2003,2006, respectively. Both included patients aged 18,54 years presenting to the ED with acute asthma. Study Design. Retrospective cohort studies. Data Collection. Clinical information was obtained from medical record review. The risk index was derived in the MARC cohort and then was prospectively validated in the NEDSS cohort. Principle Findings. There were 3,515 patients in the derivation cohort and 3,986 in the validation cohort. The risk index included nine variables (age, sex, current smoker, ever admitted for asthma, ever intubated for asthma, duration of symptoms, respiratory rate, peak expiratory flow, and number of beta-agonist treatments) and showed satisfactory discrimination (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, 0.75) and calibration ( p=.30 for Hosmer,Lemeshow test) when applied to the validation cohort. Conclusions. We developed and validated a novel risk-adjustment tool in acute asthma. This tool can be used for health care provider profiling to identify outliers for quality improvement purposes. [source]


    My Scientific Collaboration and Fraternal Friendship with Giambattista Consiglio

    HELVETICA CHIMICA ACTA, Issue 8 2006
    Franco Morandini
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Collaboration with the Community to Widen Participation: ,Partners' without Power or Absent ,Friends'?

    HIGHER EDUCATION QUARTERLY, Issue 2-3 2004
    Kim SlackArticle first published online: 9 DEC 200
    Current discourse around widening participation emphasises the importance of partnership and collaboration. For example, the Learning Skills Council and government policy all cite the need to adopt collaborative approaches to assist with widening participation and student progression. In 1998 the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) called for proposals for higher education institutions to build partnerships to widen participation. Successful partnership bids were subsequently funded for a period of one year initially and extended up to three years in total. One of the aims of the partnerships as outlined by the HEFCE was to address uneven rates of demand for higher education amongst certain socio-economic groups by working in collaboration with other organisations. This article focuses on one aspect of an evaluative research project examining collaboration resulting from the HEFCE initiative: the involvement of communities in developing partnerships. It examines their initial involvement and the extent to which they were then incorporated into ongoing partnerships and decision-making. Factors that mitigate against community involvement are discussed. It is concluded that although organizational and institutional links can be highly beneficial to realizing the objective of a widened base of involvement in HE there may be a sense in which the role of communities is either neglected, or worse, omitted. [source]


    Collaborative Research: Policy and the Management of Knowledge Creation in UK Universities

    HIGHER EDUCATION QUARTERLY, Issue 2 2001
    David Smith
    Collaboration in research activity is now the rule not the exception. It is encouraged by government, funding bodies and research councils. However, the concept of collaboration is difficult to define. It occurs at many different levels, driven by a complex research system-policy dynamic. Three different models of collaboration , inter-personal, team and corporate , are identified, each with their own rationale, structure, benefits and costs. The paper examines the institutional implications of these models. It argues that institutions and individual researchers conceptualise and operationalise research collaboration in different ways. Although vital to institutional mission, collaborative research is rarely mapped by senior managers with any precision. In general, institutional approaches to the management of collaborative research lag behind the policy rhetoric. The paper concludes with an overview of the key dilemmas for institutional strategists and policy makers posed by the shift towards more collaborative approaches to research. [source]


    Two Heads Are Not Always Better Than One: Defining Parameters for Collaboration in Training

    INDUSTRIAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 4 2008
    AMY E. CROOK
    [source]