JiscJisc Futures: what will research look like in 2035?

Jisc Futures: what will research look like in 2035?

binoculars

What will research look like in 2035? Joanna Dally and Frances Downey imagine the research culture of the future

What will the world look like a generation from now? Will robots have transformed our working world? Will we move through cities in automated vehicles or even hyperloops? Will we choose to augment our bodies with highly functional prosthetics? Will low carbon energy generation be the norm or will climate change be changing the world around us? Will we see Buzz Aldrin’s prediction that humans will be resident on Mars come to pass?

These potential realities all depend on the collective endeavour of our researchers and the environment they work in. But will that exist as we know it? What might research look like in 2035? Let’s imagine the following…

  • Excellent research is no longer the monopoly of academia’s ivory towers or the engines of industry. An increasingly connected global network of makerspaces and home-based researchers is also generating ground-breaking knowledge. Data has revolutionised and democratised research and innovation. Released into the wild, individuals and algorithms mine new and historic datasets to tackle complex, interdisciplinary challenges – from the city scale to the global scale – and individuals and interest groups use these intangible assets to pursue their own research, from precision agriculture to personalised medicine.
  • Universities and research institutes are still anchors in the research ecosystem, but there has been a shift in the balance of skills that researchers within these 24-hour institutions deploy. Specialised “data wranglers” curate, assure and manipulate data, and the need to communicate the contribution of research to public life has given rise to a cadre of individuals better able to take part in public dialogue and policy development. The value placed on these skills is underscored by transparent and shared criteria for researcher progression and promotion, criteria that explicitly value individuals leading and building teams, managing finances and collaborating with diverse partners, and not just published research outputs.
  • These and other new ways of working have seen permeable and braided careers become the norm rather than the exception. An emphasis on helping “places” to flourish has incentivised collaboration with local business, charities and citizen-led initiatives to set and crowd-fund the research question.

This “imagining” reflects some of the ideas that researchers and technicians at workshops across the UK have told us would be core to their idealised culture of research. Held under the banner of “Changing Expectations” these and future events are part of a programme of work led by the Royal Society, to understand how best to steward research culture through a shifting landscape.

The vision outlined here may or may not come to pass and, as with any single notional future, will appeal differently to members of the research community. What it does, however, is provide a way to start to think about what “different” might look like and what we might need to do to get there.

So let’s unpack this speculative account. The similarities between now and then are many: the rise of interdisciplinary teams, internationalisation of research, and universities as powerhouses of knowledge creation.

However, there are also differences that span the subtle to the striking. Take the way that researchers’ talents are developed and valued. We all know researchers do more than just publish: teacher, mentor, group leader, financial manager, entrepreneur, founder, government advisor, public speaker, industrial partner, journal editor, peer reviewer…the list goes on.

Yet the system of rewarding and recognising today’s researchers has not caught up with this breadth of asks.

We have heard time and again the perception that a successful academic career will quickly be beyond your grasp if, by the end of your post-doc, you have “failed” to have at least one “glamour” publication in CellNature or Science. This is why in its response to the REF 2021 consultation, The Royal Society pushed for action to break completely the link to individuals and outputs, to ensure there was no prejudice against research outputs disseminated through new and emerging publishing models, and to make clear that impact includes public engagement and outreach, policy advice, and translation.

The concept of “failure” permeates conversations well beyond those on publishing records. There continues to be a belief that any career path other than the linear trajectory from PhD to professor would not be considered first class. To start to tackle this, and as part of Changing Expectations, the Royal Society is reaching out to individuals across the research ecosystem to explore and share their experiences of pursuing different and diverse careers, to inspire fresh thinking on what success looks like, and to inform and shape the initiatives and programmes that support career development.

Our imagined scenario also highlights the potential of AI (artificial intelligence) in scientific discovery. Machine learning techniques are already supporting scientific advances in diverse fields. In particle physics they have been used as tools for researchers seeking the Higgs-Boson. In neuroscience, they help researchers to understand how the brain processes language and images. And in astronomy, machine learning can help make sense of the vast amounts of data collected by space missions or telescopes here on Earth.

As such practices become more pervasive, this raises the possibility that new research paradigms will come to be, and that scientists and others will need to act thoughtfully to ensure that the evidence is trustworthy, trusted, sought and used.

While future research practices and infrastructure will change over time, one thing is certain – science is global.

Research commissioned by The Royal Society earlier this year found that almost 30 per cent of UK academic staff were non-UK nationals, 72 per cent of active UK researchers had trained abroad, and almost 80 per cent of researchers believe that there is an expectation that international mobility will be a part of their career.

The culture of research in the UK – and around the world – benefits immensely from the diversity of thought and practice that international collaborations bring. The Royal Society will work hard to ensure that this continues to be the case and that the UK remains a magnet for talent.

Whatever the future may hold, hyperloops, Mars or otherwise, it is the culture of research that will support our world-class researchers to deliver at their best. What we need to do now is to understand the culture that the community wants and to set ourselves firmly on course to achieve this.

Dr Joanna Dally is head of policy at The Royal Society and Dr Frances Downey is senior policy adviser at The Royal Society.

This article was commissioned by Times Higher Education in partnership with Jisc as part of the Jisc Futures series. Jisc is the UK body for digital technology and resources in higher education, further education, skills and research. 

Brought to you by