Abstract

Input, output, impact, and processes are central indicators of the science, technology, and innovation production. The input is usually associated to investments made in science and technology, and it varies among different countries and scientific fields. Thus, the input can influence other impact indicators. Here, we evaluated the effect of the input data (i.e., number of funding) on process (i.e., collaboration) and output (i.e., number of citation) indicators of ecological research. Moreover, we detailed the effect of the number of funding on the collaboration and number of citations by each country (based on the nationality of authors). We found that most of published papers had some degrees of financial support, and that the production of papers with funding increased over the years. Funding had a positive effect on the collaboration and citation of papers; however, we observed that: in countries with higher investments in Science and Technology, the number of funding impacts positively and directly on the number of authors (collaboration) and in countries with low levels of investments in Science and Technology, the number of funding impacts positively and directly on the number of citations. Our models presented a low predictive power, but similar to other informetric studies. Our results indicated that impact indicators evaluated have an integrated structure, and the effects at one level can affect other levels. Nonetheless, the impact of the number of funding on informetric data can vary among countries; therefore, these results are important to the development of national policies and future informetric studies.

Highlights

  • Indicators of the scientific, technological, and innovative production can be divided into one of the following four groups: input, output, impact, and processes (Moed, 2017)

  • We evaluated scientific papers of the ecological research field selected from the WoS database using the structural equation modeling (SEM) approach. ­despite several studies in the scientific literature have investigated the influence of funding on collaboration and number of citations (e.g., Jacob and Lefgren, 2011; Fortin and Currie, 2013; Rigby, 2013; Yan et al, 2018), the new aspects of our study rely on: investigating a new and productive research field; evaluating this relationship considering the nationality of the authors; and applying a new methodological approach to reveal direct and indirect effects of funding

  • We found that the number of ecological papers published increased over the years and the growth rate of papers with international collaboration is higher than the observed rate for papers with national collaboration, even though the number of papers with national collaboration was higher (Figure 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Indicators of the scientific, technological, and innovative production can be divided into one of the following four groups: input, output, impact, and processes (Moed, 2017). Input is highly variable among different countries and scientific fields (May, 1998), a phenomenon that creates asymmetries during the stages of the scientific production and, on impact indicators, such as the number of: articles produced, citations, and acknowledgments referring to project funding (Fortin and Currie, 2013; Rigby, 2013). An important and crucial step to science relies on understanding how investments made in the scientific process are affecting these parameters in different scales, countries, and fields of knowledge

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