Nature | News Feature

Online collaboration: Scientists and the social network

Giant academic social networks have taken off to a degree that no one expected even a few years ago. A Nature survey explores why.

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Interactive: Why scholars use social media

In Nature's survey, a subset of scholars who said they 'regularly visited' social media sites were quizzed in detail about their activities.

Voices from the survey

In 2011, Emmanuel Nnaemeka Nnadi needed help to sequence some drug-resistant fungal pathogens. A PhD student studying microbiology in Nigeria, he did not have the expertise and equipment he needed. So he turned to ResearchGate, a free social-networking site for academics, and fired off a few e-mails. When he got a reply from Italian geneticist Orazio Romeo, an inter­national collaboration was born. Over the past three years, the two scientists have worked together on fungal infections in Africa, with Nnadi, now at Plateau State University in Bokkos, shipping his samples to Romeo at the University of Messina for analysis. “It has been a fruitful relationship,” says Nnadi — and they have never even met.

Ijad Madisch, a Berlin-based former physician and virologist, tells this story as just one example of the successes of ResearchGate, which he founded with two friends six years ago. Essentially a scholarly version of Facebook or LinkedIn, the site gives members a place to create profile pages, share papers, track views and downloads, and discuss research. Nnadi has uploaded all his papers to the site, for instance, and Romeo uses it to keep in touch with hundreds of scientists, some of whom helped him to assemble his first fungal genome.

More than 4.5 million researchers have signed up for ResearchGate, and another 10,000 arrive every day, says Madisch. That is a pittance compared with Facebook’s 1.3 billion active users, but astonishing for a network that only researchers can join. And Madisch has grand goals for the site: he hopes that it will become a key venue for scientists wanting to engage in collaborative discussion, peer review papers, share negative results that might never otherwise be published, and even upload raw data sets. “With ResearchGate we’re changing science in a way that’s not entirely foreseeable,” he says, telling investors and the media that his aim for the site is to win a Nobel prize.

The company now employs 120 people, and last June it announced that it had secured US$35 million from investors including the world’s richest individual, Bill Gates — cash that came on top of two earlier rounds of undisclosed investment. “It was really a head-scratcher when we saw that,” says Leslie Yuan, who heads a team working on networking and innovation software for scientists at the University of California, San Francisco. “We thought — who are these guys? How are they getting so much money?”

Yuan is not the only one who has been taken aback. A few years ago, the idea that millions of scholars would rush to join one giant academic social network seemed dead in the water. The list of failed efforts to launch a ‘Facebook for science’ included Scientist Solutions, SciLinks, Epernicus, 2collab and Nature Network (run by the company that publishes Nature). Some observers speculated that this was because scientists were wary of sharing data, papers and comments online — or if they did want to share, they would prefer do it on their own terms, rather than through a privately owned site.

But it seems that those earlier efforts were ahead of their time —or maybe they were simply doing it wrong. Today, ResearchGate is just one of several academic social networks going viral. San Francisco-based competitor Academia.edu says that it has 11 million users. “The goal of the company is to rebuild science publishing from the ground up,” declares chief executive Richard Price, who studied philosophy at the University of Oxford, UK, before he founded Academia.edu in 2008, and has already raised $17.7 million from venture capitalists. A third site, London-based Mendeley, claims 3.1 million members. It was originally launched as software for managing and storing documents, but it encourages private and public social networking. The firm was snapped up in 2013 by Amsterdam-based publishing giant Elsevier for a reported £45 million (US$76 million).

Winning formula

Despite the excitement and investment, it is far from clear how much of the activity on these sites involves productive engagement, and how much is just passing curiosity — or a desire to access papers shared by other users that they might otherwise have to pay for. “I’ve met basically no academics in my field with a favourable view of ResearchGate,” says Daniel MacArthur, a geneticist at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

In an effort to get past the hype and explore what is really happening, Nature e-mailed tens of thousands of researchers in May to ask how they use social networks and other popular profile-hosting or search services, and received more than 3,500 responses from 95 different countries.

The results confirm that ResearchGate is certainly well-known (see ‘Remarkable reach’, and full results online at go.nature.com/jvx7pl). More than 88% of scientists and engineers said that they were aware of it — slightly more than had heard of Google+ and Twitter — with little difference between countries. Just under half said that they visit regularly, putting the site second only to Google Scholar, and ahead of Facebook and LinkedIn. Almost 29% of regular visitors had signed up for a profile on ResearchGate in the past year.

This does not surprise Billie Swalla, an evolutionary biologist and director of the University of Washington’s Friday Harbor Laboratories. Swalla says that she and most of her colleagues are on ResearchGate, where she finds the latest relevant papers much more easily than by following marine-biology journals. “They do send you a lot of spam,” she says, “but in the past few months, I’ve found that every important paper I thought I should read has come through ResearchGate.” Swalla admits to comparing herself to others using the site’s ‘RG Score’ — its metric of social engagement. “I think it taps into some basic human instinct,” she adds.

Tactical breakdown

Some irritated scientists say that the site taps into human instincts only too well — by regularly sending out automated e-mails that profess to come from colleagues active on the site, thus luring others to join on false pretences. (Indeed, 35% of regular ResearchGate users in Nature’s survey said that they joined the site because they received an e-mail.) Lars Arvestad, a computer scientist at Stockholm University, is fed up with the tactic. “I think it is a disgraceful kind of marketing and I am choosing not to use their service because of that,” he says. Some of the apparent profiles on the site are not owned by real people, but are created automatically — and incompletely — by scraping details of people’s affiliations, publication records and PDFs, if available, from around the web. That annoys researchers who do not want to be on the site, and who feel that the pages misrepresent them — especially when they discover that ResearchGate will not take down the pages when asked. Madisch is unruffled by these complaints. The pages are marked for what they are, and are not counted among the site’s real users, he says, adding: “We changed many things based on the feedback we got. But the criticism is relatively small, relative to the number of people who like the service.”

Academia.edu seems less well-known than ResearchGate: only 29% of scientists in the survey were aware of it and just 5% visited regularly. But it has its fans — among them climate scientist Hans von Storch, director of the Institute for Coastal Research in Geesthacht, Germany, who uses the site to share not only his papers, but also his interviews, book reviews and lectures. Price points out that Academia.edu has much higher web traffic than ResearchGate overall, perhaps because — unlike its rival — it is open to anyone to join. And for the 480 social science, arts and humanities researchers included in Nature’s survey, usage of the two sites was more closely matched.

High numbers by themselves do not mean much, says Jan Reichelt, a co-founder of Mendeley (which scored 48% awareness and 8% regular visitors among scientists in Nature’s survey). “We’ve moved away from mentioning ‘start-up vanity metrics’ as the key number,” he says. “It doesn’t tell you about the quality of interaction.”

To get a rough measure of that quality, Nature asked a subset of the most active respondents what they actually do on the sites they visit regularly (see ‘Idle, browse or chat?’). The most-selected activity on both ResearchGate and Academia.edu was simply maintaining a profile in case someone wanted to get in touch — suggesting that many researchers regard their profiles as a way to boost their professional presence online (see ‘A battle for profiles’). After that, the most popular options involved posting content related to work, discovering related peers, tracking metrics and finding recommended research papers. “These are tools that people are using to raise their profiles and become more discoverable, not community tools of social interaction,” argues Deni Auclair, a lead analyst for Outsell, a media, information and technology consulting firm in Burlingame, California. By comparison, Twitter, although used regularly by only 13% of scientists in Nature’s survey, is much more interactive: half of the Twitterati said that they use it to follow discussions on research-related issues, and 40% said that it is a medium for “commenting on research that is relevant to my field” (compared with 15% on ResearchGate).

A battle for profiles

After Zen Faulkes published his latest paper on sand crabs, he spent half a day updating his many Internet profiles to display the information. There was his personal website; Academia.edu; ResearchGate; Mendeley; ImpactStory; his page on the website of his institution, the University of Texas–Pan American in Edinburg; his profile with the Open Researcher and Contributor ID (ORCID) project; and Google Scholar. “It is useful to have a presence on all of them,” he says.

Perhaps wisely, administrators at some institutions have decided that few researchers can be trusted to be as assiduous as Faulkes in updating their various profiles. To avoid the problem of rotting links and out-of-date webpages, institutions are creating their own networks of automatically updated faculty-member profiles, using commercial tools such as Elsevier’s Pure Experts Portal, Thomson Reuters’ Converis and Wiley’s Knode, as well as open-source profile-building software such as Harvard Catalyst Profiles, run by the Harvard Clinical and Translational Science Center in Boston, Massachusetts, and VIVO, developed at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, and funded by a US$12.2-million grant from the US National Institutes of Health (VIVO partners with Symplectic, a London-based software company owned by Digital Science, a sister company to Nature Publishing Group).

These ‘top-down’ profile networks do not completely solve the updating problem, because they do not push each new profile change to ResearchGate, Academia.edu and the rest. But advocates see them as an important step forward, both because the information they contain is reliably up to date — often fed directly from an institution’s human-resources department —  and because they structure their information in similar standardized, machine-readable formats. The standardization, in turn, means that computer programs can easily extract data or yoke together information in separate profiles. Leslie Yuan, who develops networking software at the University of California, San Francisco, says that profiles at her institution — based on the Harvard Catalyst Profiles software — have been used heavily by journalists, administrators, faculty members and even a child who accessed them to make scientist trading cards for a school project.

But Richard Price, chief executive of Academia.edu in San Francisco, says: “I don’t think those megaprojects are focused on what the user really wants.” For example, he argues that VIVO has not yet implemented its idea of joining up institutions across the United States so that one aggregated search finds experts from many faculties. In his view, the giant academic social networks are better placed to become go-to profile pages.

Papers please

Laura Warman, an ecologist at the University of Hawaii at Hilo, echoes the views of many when she says that she has uploaded papers on Academia.edu to keep track of how often, where and when they are downloaded. “I find it especially intriguing that my most downloaded paper is not my most cited work,” she says. “To put it bluntly, I have no idea if these sites have any impact whatsoever on my career — I tend to doubt they do — but I enjoy knowing that my work is being discussed.”

Price says that 3 million papers have been uploaded to Academia.edu, and Madisch says that 14 million are accessible through ResearchGate (although he will not say how many of those have been automatically scraped from freely accessible places elsewhere). An unpublished study conducted by computer scientists Madian Khabsa at Pennsylvania State University in University Park and Mike Thelwall at the University of Wolverhampton, UK, suggests that by August this year, the full texts of around one-quarter of all molecular-biology papers published in 2012 were available from ResearchGate. That said, these days papers are easily found on many sites: a study conducted for the European Commission last year found that 18% of biology papers published in 2008–11 were open access from the start, and said that 57% could be read for free in some form, somewhere on the Internet, by April 2013 (see Nature 500, 386–387; 2013).

Publishers are worried that the sites could become public troves of illegally uploaded content. In late 2013, Elsevier sent 3,000 notices to Academia.edu and other sites under the US Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), demanding that they take down papers for which the publisher owned copyright. Academia.edu passed each notice on to its users — a decision that triggered a public outcry. One researcher who received a take-down request did not want to be named, but told Nature: “I hardly know any scientists who don’t violate copyright laws. We just fly below the radar and hope that the publishers don’t notice.”

These concerns are not unique to large social networks, says Price; the same issue surrounds content posted in universities’ online repositories (to which Elsevier also sent some DMCA notices last year). “This is really part of the wider battle where academics want to share their papers freely online, whereas publishers want to keep content behind a paywall to monetize it,” he says, noting the nuance that many publishers allow researchers to upload the final accepted version of a manuscript, but not the final PDF. He has seen fewer take-down notices this year.

Open intentions

Giant social networks could also disrupt the research landscape by capturing other public content. In March this year, ResearchGate launched a feature called Open Review, encouraging users to post in-depth critiques of existing publications. Madisch says that members have now contributed more than 10,000 such reviews. “I believe that this is just the tip of the iceberg,” he says. He wants users to upload raw data sets too — including, perhaps, negative results that might otherwise never be published — and says that 700 are appearing on the site each day.

At Academia.edu, Price is planning to launch a post-publication peer-review feature as well. “We have to build better filter systems to explain what research you can trust,” he says.

Few would argue with these goals, but many wonder why researchers would deposit their data sets and reviews on these new social networks, rather than elsewhere online — on their own websites, for example, in university repositories, or on dedicated data-storage sites such as Dryad or figshare (see Nature 500, 243–245; 2013 — figshare is funded by Nature’s parent company, Macmillan Publishers). To Madisch, the answer lies with the social sites’ burgeoning communities of users — the famed ‘network’ effect. “If you post on ResearchGate, you are reaching the people who matter,” he says. But Titus Brown, a computational scientist at Michigan State University in East Lansing, is concerned about the sites’ business plans as they seek to survive. “What worries me is that at some point ResearchGate will use their information to make a profit in ways that we are uncomfortable with — or they will be bought by someone who will do that,” he says.

Madisch says that ResearchGate will not sell its user data, and that it already makes some money by running job adverts (as does Academia.edu). In the future, he hopes to add a marketplace for laboratory services and products, connecting companies and corporate researchers to academics (28% of the network’s users are from the corporate world, he says). Price talks about providing institutional analytics to universities as well. But analysts including Auclair argue that the sites have limited earning potential, because they are targeted at a much narrower demographic than Facebook or Twitter. “What’s most likely is the networks that have critical mass get acquired and those that don’t will die,” she says (although Madisch says that being bought out “would be a personal failure”).

Mendeley’s acquisition by Elsevier last year left the site better placed to become a global platform for research collaboration, says Reichelt, because it intersects with other Elsevier products such as the Scopus database of research articles. Much of the collaboration done using Mendeley is private, but the firm does allow other computer programs to automatically pull out useful anonymized public information — such as which papers are viewed most by which researchers. Neither Academia.edu nor ResearchGate yet offer this service, although Madisch says that he is developing it.

“I think at some point there will be one winner in this race,” says Madisch. Or — as Nature’s survey suggests is already happening — different disciplines might favour different sites. Some analysts argue that despite their millions of users, massive social academic networking sites have not yet proven their essential worth. “They are nice-to-have tools, not need-to-have,” says Auclair. But Price says that the networks are on the front line of a trend that cannot be ignored. “We saw the changes in the market, and we could see that academics wanted to share openly. The tide is starting to turn in our direction.”

Journal name:
Nature
Volume:
512,
Pages:
126–129
Date published:
()
DOI:
doi:10.1038/512126a

Corrections

Corrected:

This article originally gave the wrong affiliation for Laura Warman, who is at the University of Hawaii at Hilo. It also stated that the University of California, San Francisco, uses VIVO-based profiles, when in fact it uses the same software as Harvard Catalyst Profiles. These have now been corrected.

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  1. Avatar for Clarinda Cerejo
    Clarinda Cerejo
    It's interesting that there seems to be quite a bit of unrest at some of ResearchGate's policies. I am a researcher studying trends in academic publishing (ORCID profile: http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3161-6951) and active on Twitter in a professional capacity (https://twitter.com/ClarindaCerejo). I used to be active on ResearchGate and enjoyed participating in and learning from various discussions. However, ResearchGate suddenly, and with no intimation, changed their policy to restrict access to users with a recognized academic email address. I happen to be a researcher with a commercial affiliation, whose domain is not in ResearchGate's database, so I completely lost access to my account, although my contributions are still searchable on Google. By an extension of this exclusive policy, should retired researchers who no longer have an institutional affiliation be banned from ResearchGate? It is policies like these that go against the grain of open science and seem to justify speculations and worries that "ResearchGate will use their information to make a profit in ways that we are uncomfortable with — or they will be bought by someone who will do that." I tried to contact ResearchGate regarding the access issue on multiple occasions but received no response from the team. As a result, I have lost interest in ResearchGate altogether and have serious questions and concerns about its reportedly noble objectives.
  2. Avatar for Robert Buntrock
    Robert Buntrock
    As a semi-retired chemist, no longer active in research I was encouraged to join ResearchGate a few years ago by Sigma Xi. At first the discussion groups I signed up for were interesting but they rapidly degenerated into redundant ramblings illustrating that the contributors had not read the previous posts on the string. Once a rating system was developed where members got brownie points for any contribution to the site, the motives for redundancy became obvious: career advancement. Some of my publications were automatically posted but their search algorithm must be inadequate for many were missed. And cancelled out a couple of years ago, with some difficulty. The duplicative daily updates are also memory hogs. Significantly both Sigma Xi and ACS are getting on the bandwagon and developing social nets for their members as well. Both my wife and I on separate occasions were encouraged by friends ("invitations") to join LinkedIn. I cancelled after a few days (again with difficulty) when it attracted unnecessary attention. in my wife's case she stayed on for a couple of weeks until she determined they had added, without her input, a hobby--photography--in which she did not participate. We noted the site has the most attraction for younger members still building their careers whether entrepreneurs or not.
  3. Avatar for Carlo Hamalainen
    Carlo Hamalainen
    No mention of Github?
  4. Avatar for Nikolai Slavov
    Nikolai Slavov
    There are many reasons for and against social networks for scientists as you eloquently articulate some of them. The benefit that resonates the most with me is the ability to upload manuscripts (as typeset by the authors and allowed by legal regulations, not the PDFs produced by the publishers) that may otherwise be guarded behind pay walls. Making research results more widely available without infringing legal rights is a clear benefit in my opinion.
  5. Avatar for Ben Bederson
    Ben Bederson
    Thanks for making the data public. We created a richer interactive visualization with a web-based tool we have developed. You can see it and do your own analysis of this data set here: Keshif Visualization of academic social network data
  6. Avatar for Ian Dickie
    Ian Dickie
    I think the quote from Daniel MacArthur says a great deal. Many of us are on ResearchGate, but resent the endless emails and what seems to me to be almost sleazy practices used by the site to trick users into inviting colleagues or uploading papers. This lack of user goodwill could become a significant liability if a serious competitor were to emerge.
  7. Avatar for William Gunn
    William Gunn
    This is good initial data to have out there, though I think it must suffer a bit from sampling error. Looking at our site stats, it's pretty clear the major use of Mendeley isn't for peer recommendations, so it's strange that that shows up so highly in the survey. By far, the major use of Mendeley is as a reference manager and I suspect that if sharing collections of papers with colleagues were an option, many more would have selected that option. So it's good initial data that shows the need for a more comprehensive survey of the space before any real conclusions can be drawn. William Gunn, Head of Academic Outreach, Mendeley http://mendeley.com/profiles/william-gunn/
  8. Avatar for Richard Van Noorden
    Richard Van Noorden
    Reference manager wasn't given as an option, because the survey was only asking about the social aspects of networks. Most of the free-text responses on Mendeley did answer 'reference manager' [indeed many said that they only knew Mendeley as a reference manager, and didn't know it could be used for anything 'social' like peer recommendations]. You can see this in the 'voices from the survey' featured above in the interactive graphic, or you can see all comments about Mendeley in the raw data, hosted on figshare.
  9. Avatar for Audrey Babkirk
    Audrey Babkirk
    I must say, I have been searching for reliable information on scientists' use of social media for months, with little success. These results at least provide a general idea of where scientists are going online and how they use various social media platforms. This is unique and invaluable information--thank you, thank you, THANK YOU for sharing it.
  10. Avatar for Jim Woodgett
    Jim Woodgett
    The stickiness of any of these platforms is key to their survival. New initiatives are developing all the time and the investment by users in most of the current research-focused sites is quite ephemeral. Scientists will migrate to platforms that offer them something in terms of value. Clearly, the existing efforts are hitting the right note with at least some but the large numbers of "users" is no guarantee of success. Indeed, as noted by several of the people interviewed, ResearchGate's tactics rub many the wrong way - yet are presumably part of the reason why there are so many "users". That said, it's definitely a positive sign to see increased use of forums for exchange and community building that break down some of the stuffiness and hierarchy associated with academic research. If these tools help enable (especially) young researchers to connect with each other, all power to them. Just don't take them for granted!
  11. Avatar for Keith Bradnam
    Keith Bradnam
    This article misses one of the founding fathers of scientific social networks: Epernicus (http://epernicus.com/network) a site that is at least six years old and still active (though seemingly less popular than sites that came after it).
  12. Avatar for o m
    o m
    The French-based equivalent is missed: http://www.mysciencework.com
  13. Avatar for Richard Van Noorden
    Richard Van Noorden
    My Science Work was included in the survey, but the numbers were so small as to be not worth mentioning in the feature. 7.7% of respondents had heard of it; 1.7% used it regularly. You can see all the responses on My Science Work in the raw data, hosted on figshare.
  14. Avatar for Jim Woodgett
    Jim Woodgett
    Epernicus is mentioned in passing in the 5th paragraph.

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