Research is defined as “creative and systematic work undertaken in order to increase the stock of knowledge – including knowledge of humankind, culture and society – and to devise new applications of available knowledge.” The activity must meet five criteria: Novel, Creative, Uncertain, Systematic and Transferable and/or reproducible.
Research has performance-related conditions and qualifies according to the Frascati Manual (OECD, 2015) definitions for basic research, applied research or experimental development.
- Basic research: Experimental or theoretical work undertaken primarily to acquire new knowledge of the underlying foundation of phenomena and observable facts, without any particular application or use in view.
- Applied research: Original investigation undertaken in order to acquire new knowledge. It is, however, directed primarily towards a specific practical aim or objective.
- Experimental development: Systematic work, drawing on existing knowledge gained from research and/or practical experience that is directed to producing new materials, products or devices, to installing new processes, systems and services, or to improving substantially those already produced or installed.
Notable exclusions
Both generally and in social sciences, economics and humanities there are some notable exclusions:
- Surveys or data collection that are routine and do not form a part of a wider research project.
- Policy-related studies at national, regional and local levels, including those of businesses. This includes analysis and assessment of: existing programmes, policies and operations of organisations and public bodies; work of analysis and monitoring external phenomena; and the work of legislative commissions. This includes all work providing close support and advice to policy decisions.
- Programmatic evaluations including intelligence band evidence-building efforts associated with policies and programmatic advice that do not have novel research questions. Scientific advisory support and policy decision-making evidence are not usually research but might be where developing improved methodologies is involved.
- Fundraising, managing and distributing grants to other organisations.
- The management, administration, and support of research activities that are usually included in overhead.
- Education and training other than PhD research
Research is typically funded via competitive peer-reviewed schemes where the activity is driven by the researcher’s own ideas or curiosity, and where they define the questions and methods within the funder’s thematic priorities. Results are openly publishable for academic purposes.
If you are not sure if your application or opportunity is Research please check the table below and contact your unit’s Research Development Manager for support.
Your unit’s Research Development Manager can also advise on relevant research funding opportunities.