Meta-research: justifying career disruption in funding applications, a survey of Australian researchers

  1. Adrian Barnett  Is a corresponding author
  2. Katie Page
  3. Carly Dyer
  4. Susanna Cramb
  1. School of Public Health and Social Work, Queensland University of Technology, Australia
  2. Australian Centre for Health Services Innovation and Centre for Healthcare Transformation, Queensland University of Technology, Australia
  3. Centre for Health Economics Research and Evaluation, University of Technology Sydney, Australia
6 figures and 3 additional files

Figures

Percentages for the three demographic questions split by the random and non-random sample.

The black dots are the percentages from the latest available NHMRC data on applicants which are compared with the random sample.

Percentages for the questions on awareness and understanding of current career disruption policies and two questions on the respondents’ use of career disruption sections split by the random and non-random sample.
Percentages for the reasons given for not including career disruptions sections split by the random and non-random sample.

The reasons are ordered by the overall numbers agreeing across the two samples.

Estimated mean time away from research that applicants would write for four hypothetical career disruptions of 6 months duration.

The dots are the means and horizontal lines are 95% credible intervals. The numbers above and below the mean are the probability that the scenario had the lowest mean. The results are shown without imputing missing data and imputing 6 months for missing slider data.

Percentages for the three questions concerning the respondents’ perspective as a peer reviewer.

The histogram shows the difference in time that respondents gave to an applicant who detailed their medical issue and one who did not.

Odds ratios to examine if women were more or less likely to agree to selected questions.

The odds ratio is on a log-10 scale. An odds ratio of 1 indicates no difference for women relative to men. The horizontal lines are 95% confidence intervals.

Additional files

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  1. Adrian Barnett
  2. Katie Page
  3. Carly Dyer
  4. Susanna Cramb
(2022)
Meta-research: justifying career disruption in funding applications, a survey of Australian researchers
eLife 11:e76123.
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.76123