Publishing interdisciplinary research--a perspective from the Croatian Medical Journal.
EDITORIAL
399
Croat Med J. 2015;56:399-400
doi: 10.3325/cmj.2015.56.399
Publishing interdisciplinary
research – a perspective from
the Croatian Medical Journal
Like Archimedes who demanded a place to stand so that
he could move the Earth, scientific journals also need a firm
point to stand on. We use this example because it stresses the importance of determining the journal’s specific
research field by editorial policies. One of the basic strategies for medical journals is to define their scope, which
helps them to target specific readership, attract authors,
and select reliable reviewers. Simply put, it governs editorial policy. The Croatian Medical Journal is a general medical
journal and although it might seem at first that lacking a
specific field is mainly a weakness (1), we will try to provide
arguments that it does not necessarily have to be so.
The dilemma whether to be general or specific is not only
to be considered by editorial policies, but also by the researchers. Aspiring for grant agencies support, and favorable publication metrics, research groups are equally concerned whether to be specific or general, in particular if
they pursue interdisciplinary research. Biomedical research
is particularly resource demanding, since it requires sophisticated equipment, consumables, and highly skilled
experts. To obtain and maintain these resources scientists
are under constant pressure to acquire and justify investments. Alongside high-end publications, successful teams
pursue other values, including translational skills connecting basic and clinical medicine, technology transfer skills
documented by patents, and societal impact. The impact
of the research for the benefit of the society is a category
that is still difficult to be objectified and evaluated (2). However, it is continuously gaining importance in the current
research environment. The demand to evaluate the wider
impact of science is seen as a threat to curiosity-oriented
research, and blue skies research, but it is inevitable if we
are to preserve and increase funding needed for advancement of biomedical research (3). Curiosity-driven research
is the basic substance of science and should therefore be
incorporated into overall research activities, regardless of
whether they are mandate-driven or applied research. This
impact-driven change can be perceived as an opportunity
rather than a threat, giving science an energizing role in
Srećko Gajović1,2
University of Zagreb School of Medicine, Croatian Institute for
Brain Research, Zagreb, Croatia
1
Croatian Medical Journal, Zagreb, Croatia
2
the knowledge-based society. As a consequence, the research is expected to be regulated in a way that the obtained novelty makes a change for the benefit of society.
The request for a research project to achieve an impact
is not at all simple and results in increasing complexity of
research and in projects combining more research fields.
Responding to this request transforms the research environment. In biomedicine it is an uphill battle to acquire
increasing amounts of resources and to obtain results that
provide benefits for the patients. This pressure has a double effect; on the individual level, it requires researchers
who are excellent in their own field, but on the research
group level there is a need to team up and gather diverse
competencies in a coordinated effort. These diverse competencies drive research increasingly toward a manifold
disciplinary effort. It can be multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary, or transdisciplinary corresponding to additive, interactive, or holistic approach respectively (4). Regardless
of the level and type of collaboration, the need to combine disciplines in order to achieve the desired result is
constantly present.
Although reasons for multiple disciplinary efforts are well
justified, on the practical level the interdisciplinary research confronts difficulties, among others lack of support
from both granting agencies as well as scientific journals
(5). In particular, to choose the right journal for multidisciplinary publications can be a challenge, requiring from the
authors to pinpoint the center of gravity of their research,
and then approach the correct journal. The author of this
editorial himself received an unfavorable peer-review of a
multidisciplinary publication, in which the reviewer considered only a single segment of the research and failed
to grasp the main message that was outside of his or her
own particular expertise. To put it simply, the real value of
multidisciplinary research can be difficult to evaluate, not
to mention that such research may find it hard to get financial support. The excellence of a reviewer in his own
field can undermine fair judgment of a publication
www.cmj.hr
400
EDITORIAL
Croat Med J. 2015;56:399-400
or a grant proposal when it comes to the research components outside that reviewer’s field of interest.
References
From the editorial perspective, the Croatian Medical Journal welcomes multiple disciplinary efforts, and recognizes
this as an important asset to its future. As a journal oriented to emerging scientific communities and researchers, it
represents an exemplary forum to present results not to
be assigned to a particular field. As it is claimed here, the
future of scientific research lies in the combination and
coordination of multiple competences by uniting highly
skilled scientists and specialists (6). Taking this in account
the emerging research teams can choose to shortcut their
development starting immediately as a multidisciplinary
effort. Instead of first gaining recognition in separate fields
and then aspiring to the cross-disciplinary effort, they can
use the platform offered by the Croatian Medical Journal
to present their coordinated efforts from the very beginning. The already established quality tradition of the Croatian Medical Journal can represent an advantage over the
newly established journals, corresponding to the emerging cross-disciplinary fields (eg, personalized medicine, regenerative medicine, tissue engineering) (7). One of the
examples is nanomedicine, a lucrative field with a number of emerging journals, which aspire indexing and rapidly achieve high impact. To compete with these emerging
journals is a challenge that stands before general medical
journals like the Croatian Medical Journal.
2
1
Gajovic S. What is constant in a time of change? Croat Med J.
2011;52:593. Medline:21990076 doi:10.3325/cmj.2011.52.593
If multiple disciplinary effort is the right place to stand,
then the Croatian Medical Journal can aspire “to move the
Earth” of biomedicine. At a new interdisciplinary stage of
the biomedical future, the Croatian Medical Journal must
be ready to respond to the emerging challenges of the
new research pattern and publish relevant science.
Acknowledgments The development of interdisciplinary approaches and
intellectual property management at University of Zagreb School of Medicine (...truncated)