Our research impact is the demonstrable contribution that our work makes to society – to individuals, communities, organisations, nations and the economy.
Engaging with research users and identifying potential impacts from the outset will help you to plan processes by which your research may directly or indirectly catalyse change. Planning includes considering the kinds of impact you are hoping to achieve; that is, what might change, for whom, to what extent, and when.
The NIHR have produced a comprehensive toolkit which can help you to plan for impact at the start of a research project – which will help you to outline how you will engage with research users to deliver impact from your research.
This toolkit is designed to help you to learn the main stages of a standard IR process, which will lead to results that are comparable across regions and countries.
People leave our training armed with powerful tools and techniques that they can implement immediately to create a step change in the impact of their research. Underpinning these techniques is a unique relational approach to impact that enables people to generate deep and lasting change through their research. Consistent with this approach, we work with people long after the training event, helping people work through a series of steps to put what they've learned into practice in the weeks and months that follow.
Learning analytics has the potential to assist instructors in the development of personalized learning at scale and to contribute to more equitable and socially just academic outcomes.
his playbook is designed for two main purposes:
To help those who are working with NouLAB on innovation processes.
To share with the lab community how NouLAB approaches our work.
A. Gokcezade, J. Leitner, and M. Haller. ACM International Conference on Advances in Computer Entertainment Technology, 8 (3):
19:1--19:16(December 2010)Place: New York, NY, USA
Publisher: ACM.
C. Gilbert. Eighth International Conference on Weblogs and Social Media (ICWSM-14). Available at (20/04/16) http://comp. social. gatech. edu/papers/icwsm14. vader. hutto. pdf, (2014)
S. Stigberg. Proceedings of the 2017 ACM Conference Companion Publication on Designing Interactive Systems, page 161-166. New York, NY, USA, Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), (2017)
R. Neßelrath. Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Intelligent Environments (IE). International Conference on Intelligent Environments (IE-13), July 18-19, Athen, Greece, page 266-269. Washington, DC, USA, IEEE Computer Society, (2013)
R. Atun, N. Lennox-Chhugani, F. Drobniewski, Y. Samyshkin, and R. Coker. European journal of public health, 14 (3):
267-273(September 2004)M3: Article; Accession Number: 14596725; Atun, R. A. 1; Email Address: r.atun@imperial.ac.uk Lennox-Chhugani, N. 1 Drobniewski, F. 2 Samyshkin, Y. A. 1 Coker, R. J. 3; Affiliation: 1: Centre for Health Management, The Business School, Imperial College London, South Kensington Campus, London, UK 2: Department of Infectious Diseases, Guy's King's and St Thomas' Medical School, East Dulwich Grove, London, UK 3: Department of Public Health and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK; Source Info: Sep2004, Vol. 14 Issue 3, p267; Subject Term: COMMUNICABLE diseases; Subject Term: DISEASE management; Subject Term: MEDICINE, Preventive; Subject Term: EPIDEMICS; Subject Term: MEDICAL care; Subject Term: PUBLIC health; Author-Supplied Keyword: health systems; Author-Supplied Keyword: rapid appraisal; Author-Supplied Keyword: systems analysis; Author-Supplied Keyword: toolkit; NAICS/Industry Codes: 525120 Health and Welfare Funds; Number of Pages: 7p; Illustrations: 1 chart, 3 diagrams; Document Type: Article.
E. Kemp, and D. Setungamudalige. CHINZ '06: Proceedings of the 7th ACM SIGCHI New Zealand chapter's international conference on Computer-human interaction, page 61--66. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2006)