Trusting results – An exploration of physicists’ appraisal of their own and others’ research
Paper i proceeding, 2005

The research aspect of being a scholar in physics does not only include producing solid research results, ready for archiving in the physics literature, but involves a rich interplay with peers, colleagues, and the research community. This article focuses on a prominent part of that interplay, namely on how researchers in condensed matter physics appraise the trustworthiness of their and others' research results. Through an analysis of the ways physicists speak of trust in interviews, informed by phenomenography, four different aspects of the complex phenomenon of appraising trustworthiness are brought out, in which dimensions of variation are identified and explored. The four different aspects are encapsulated in four questions to be put to the data: 1) What is it that is spoken of as being appraised when discussing trust? 2) What is the context in which the object under consideration is appraised? 3) How is appraising trust anchored in trustworthy elements and what is their nature? 4) What is spoken of as characterizing the quality of the process of establishing trust? The variation in these four aspects together portrays the educational dimension of what it means to appraise physics research. These results further the understanding of the ground for the collaboration, peer review and communication in the research community, and portray part of what it means to be a scholar in the research capacity.

Författare

Åke Ingerman

Chalmers, Mikroteknologi och nanovetenskap

the 11th EARLI conference, Nicosia, August 2005

Ämneskategorier

Fysik

Pedagogik

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2017-10-06