Science, meet World
Why all scientists should blog: a case study
I started blogging about 2 years ago.
At that time I was 2 years into my PhD and had a respectable number of peer-reviewed publications to my name.
I should have felt supremely proud to have joined the elite circle of publishing scientists.
Unfortunately, despite the publications, I longed to feel that any of my work was making an impact beyond the traditional boundaries of academia: peer-review publications and scientific conferences.
As I was not a full-fledged PhD with a ton of experience, my opportunities for media appearances and invitations to give presentations around the globe were appropriately limited.
So, with my good friend and colleague, Travis, I started a blog.
Our first post may have been read by a total of 6 people – assuming our girlfriends (now fiancées) and both sets of parents read the link we sent via email.
Fast forward to 2 years later, and our little blog is now hosted on the freshly launched PLoS Blogs network.
I have just published the final study from my PhD in the prestigious journal, Diabetes Care.
Despite the wonderful journal, presentations at international conferences discussing the work, and a message that I thought was rather important to the field, the work was met with complete silence.
To date, the paper has yet to be cited according to Google Scholar.
Despite the lackluster response, I still thought the publication was a plus as it gave me some great fodder for our blog. So I decided to do a 5-part series on the topic of metabolically-healthy obesity, the grand finale of which was the discussion of my recently published study.
Although the PLoS Blogs network was rather new and traffic to our blog was lower than usual, the series hit a nerve.
The biggest nerve I managed to hit was that of BoingBoing.com, a very popular aggregator of interesting news stories which sent a good chunk of traffic our way.
All of this interest resulted in a total of 12,080 page views and over 70 comments from readers during the week of the series.
Put another way, the same research which I published in a prestigious medical journal and made basically no impact, was then viewed by over 12,000 sets of eyes because I decided to discuss it online.
And it doesn’t end there.
Soon after, I was contacted by a reported from MSNBC.com who wanted to do a story on my study – the same study that had been published for over 3 months at this point.
After I did my interview, I also directed the reporter to a number of colleagues in the field who are also doing seminal work in the area.
A few days later that article was published on MSNBC.com.
The article highlighted my recent work, and the work of other colleagues, including a close friend of mine who did her PhD in the same lab as me.
To date, that article has generated 119 reader comments and has been spread via twitter by even more readers.
How is that for knowledge translation?
To the internet elite, these numbers are not earth-shattering. But keep in mind we are talking about scientific research here.
It’s not quite Britney Spears shaving her head viral, but as far as engaging the public about recent developments in science, it ain’t too shabby.
And if my prior post was any indication, due to this tiny splash made possible by a simple blog post, my study might just get a few citations.
My fingers remain crossed.
Peter
Question: Are you a researcher, or a graduate student? How has social media helped you spread science to the masses?
Leave a comment and start the discussion!
| Print article | This entry was posted by Peter Janiszewski, PhD on November 23, 2010 at 7:24 pm, and is filed under Knowledge Translation, Science Blogging. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |
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about 1 year ago
This sounds a lot like why we started Science 2.0, really – trying to get more scientists to blog about their research or even just cool things in the science world, and get them in touch with the public and other scientists.
about 1 year ago
Shhhh! You’re giving away our secrets!
This is a wonderful example!
But I wonder if it should come with the disclaimer that you see on weight loss ads:
“Results not typical.”
For every success story like this, how many stories are there of people who work really hard at science blogging, but just don’t get any traction?
This success story may be the story of an early adopter. A researcher’s ability to have her story break out in wider consciousness might drop as more scientists enter the competition for attention and start blogging.
about 1 year ago
Thanks for visiting our new home, Zen!
You are of course correct – not every post or topic gets that much attention. And one doesn’t always end up in mainstream media.
It does, however, serve as a good example of what is possible. There is no getting around that fact that building an audience is necessary to get that type of outcome. But if you want your research to be seen by more than the 3 people in your field – it certainly helps that – even if your followers only include your immediate family:)
about 1 year ago
Excellent points Zen. You’re certainly right that a lot of people start a blog and then decide it’s not for them. But the good news is that there is little downside to starting a blog, especially for people who already enjoy writing (unlike some weight loss products…).
Even without getting a lot of readers, I think there are some very tangible benefits to blogging. For example, it forces you to read more papers (and for me personally, on a much wider range of topics within my area of research), to develop your thoughts on issues/papers (which comes in very handy if those same issues come up in meetings or presentations), and to work on your writing abilities. So even if it’s not getting much traction in terms of readers (and realistically, few of us have any traction at all when compared to the really popular science bloggers like Ed Yong, Orac or PZ Myers), it can still be a very worthwhile enterprise.
I’m not sure what I think about the importance of being an early adopter. We were the 3rd Canadian obesity blog, which would seem to make us quite late to the game, and yet all three of us have carved out different niches, and now several new Canadian obesity blogs have also sprung up. There are some blogs like Pharyngula which benefited tremendously from being first out of the gates, but I think that there will always be an audience (although possibly a small one) for people writing interesting and original content.
about 1 year ago
The downside of starting a blog is that if you are blogging, you’re not doing something else. I could have written multiple books, or grant proposals, or papers, during the time I’ve put in blogging.
about 1 year ago
Should you blog before publishing, or restrict it to peer reviewed & published science?
about 1 year ago
Hi Nick,
We’ll be covering this topic in detail later on, but I think one of the greatest benefits of science blogging for us has been getting to know the literature in our area far better than we did before we blogged. Because we wanted to have interesting topics to discuss, we’d be constantly checking the most recent issue of all the journals in our field, as well as the ahead of print releases every week. This certainly made writing up peer-reviewed research much easier. Blogging also significantly improved our writing skills, so when it came time to writing up a publication, it took only a fraction of the time it used to.
I guess that’s my long-winded way of saying you should do both. Peer-review pubs are the currency of academia, and if you apply for scholarships, grants, etc. no matter how popular your blog may be – currently it carries little value. I would hope this eventually changes. Until then, use a blog as a way to learn your literature, practice writing, and as a side-benefit – maybe you’ll engage a few people to care about science.
about 1 year ago
In small fields like vertebrate paleontology where there are less than 10,000 participants, with gradually smaller numbers depending on the taxa you study, I’m not sure that blogging will necessarily lead to more citations than not blogging. One thing blogging does do though is help push your work to the front for the public.
about 1 year ago
I have no science background whatsoever, but in response to Nick and Peter, one of the things that blogging might do is bring your work to the attention of someone in a totally different field who might apply your thinking to a different problem. Maybe vertebrate palenontology provides insights to some unrelated discipline. Or, you discover something to collaborate on with someone else. Maybe technology researchers are looking for a way to demonstrate their new thing and yours catches their eye. Or geoengineers discover something that informs their thinking about climate control. It’s about broadening and deepening your exposure in many ways. Take this blog post for example. I may share it with school teachers/district staff, and maybe a kid who never thought they’d be a scientist discovers something in the blog that is really compelling. I might also use it as an example that learning is process, which includes reflection and feedback.
Anyway, thanks for letting a non-scientist make a point!
about 1 year ago
Fantastic point, Holly. Cross-disciplinary pollination – I didn’t even think of that. Thanks very much for contributing!
about 1 year ago
Interesting case study and discussion here. As a communications/PR/marketing professional in higher education, I’m curious about how closely you worked with the media relations department at your university to publicize the results of your research? It’s been our experience that a timely news release about published research findings, even if it doesn’t result in much mainstream media coverage, can result in additional coverage from specialized blogs (and occasionally the big-time blogs like BoingBoing).
This is a terrific case study and I’m planning to discuss it in an upcoming blog post of my own.
about 1 year ago
Thanks for the comment and the follow-up blog post, Andrew. I have in the past had some success with the media dept at my institution. But also I have submitted ‘pitches’ that never resulted in anything. I’d love to get your perspective on how scientists and researchers should effectively communicate with the media relations folks at their institution. Most academics I know have no idea such a service even exists, or how to use it to their advantage.
about 1 year ago
And the blog post is live:
http://ow.ly/3fW9z
about 1 year ago
I’m in the social sciences, and have found that blogging about my ongoing research has been incredibly helpful for a variety of reasons. Unlike your five-part series, I tend to work first in the blog, and from there go to write for publication. Blog posts aren’t full articles by any means, but they serve as a nice bed to publicly work through ideas and receive more diverse critical commentary than would ever be provided through peer-review alone. As an added bonus, because I’ve been blogging for a few years and have enough content, when people search for topics around my research they tend to find me before other colleagues in the field. The ‘findability factor’ has been helpful in being invited to international conferences, government briefings, and so forth, and been particularly useful in opening up prospective employment opportunities should I be unable to find an academic job when I’m done writing my dissertation.
about 1 year ago
Thanks, Christopher! I love your point on the enhanced Google ranking. Another perk that never crossed my mind.
about 1 year ago
I started blogging at the end of 2007 to try to give clinicians who have little time & often limited access to research some info in topics that might help them do an effective job in pain management. Today I regularly have 600 visits a day from people around the world – so much more accessible for clinicians than journals, and so satisfying for me as an educator. If there was only a way to translate that into something my employers would accept as an effectiveness measure!
about 1 year ago
Thanks for he thoughtful comment, Bronnie. You bring up a VERY important point: the process of communicating with an audience online via a blog is all too often seen as a complete waste of time. I hope in the near future this myopic view becomes drowned out by those who recognize the impact and the great potential of online science and medical communication.
about 1 year ago
Is it the science behind blogging, blogging science, science of blogging science, or attempting to ascertain if blogs are another platform for presenting science, just as in peer-reviewed journals. Is it outreach to the public, scientists encouraging scientists with lots of pats on the back, or a platform for studying how science can best be presented via Web 2.0?
about 1 year ago
Speaking of cross-pollination, Peter, I just got a Facebook link to this post from my very own Web Services manager who leads our Social Media Club-Education chapter at NCCU. Damond Nollan presented with me at last year’s ScienceOnline conference about using the blogosphere to expand the reach of scicomm to our students from underrepresented groups. Damond’s not a scientist, but he is an advocate for faculty stepping out of their traditional roles.
So, you are helping to also bring together not just scientists from across disciplines but even local folks within a university community who might not otherwise interact.
about 1 year ago
I write for a (gasp) corporate blog. Those of us who blog for Promega do so because we like to write about interesting science. It’s a great way for us to stay up to date on current research. It’s fun, and we think the scientists we serve will enjoy it too. The online interactions we’ve had with the readers, from students asking career and grad school questions to scientists adding their expertise to the conversation have been really rewarding.
about 1 year ago
All good points here. I started blogging simply to connect better with the blogs I already read. Rather than be the same ol’ random commenter, I wanted to open the other end of the dialog. If the bloggers want to know who I am – I’ve put it out there.
The only weird part is leaving specifics out. I don’t have any 1st author papers out, and there could be mild competition (though not a crazy amount), but that is a weird concern. Is it completely irrational to worry that, should I talk in detail about my research, some other lab could like the idea and run with it?
about 1 year ago
Интересная статейка, но как по мне, можно было бы и глубже капнуть..)