ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Research Productivity for Augmenting the Innovation Potential of Higher Education Institutions: An Interpretive Structural Modeling Approach and MICMAC Analysis

Lanndon Ocampo    
Joerabell Lourdes Aro    
Samantha Shane Evangelista    
Fatima Maturan    
Kafferine Yamagishi    
Dave Mamhot    
Dina Fe Mamhot    
Dawn Iris Calibo-Senit    
Edgar Tibay    
Joseph Pepito and Renissa Quiñones    

Resumen

Current literature merely identifies the driving factors of research productivity in higher education institutions without directly examining their interrelationships that would offer some fundamental insights into the nature of these factors. Thus, this work intends to identify those driving factors and establish their structural relationships to determine those factors with crucial roles in advancing research productivity. Due to the subjectivity of the identified driving factors and the notion that the evaluation of their relationships reflects an expert judgment, an interpretive structural modeling (ISM) approach and the Matrice d?impacts croisés multiplication appliquée á un classment (MICMAC) analysis were adopted. Results show that institutional support, reward system, research funding, mentoring, and electronic information resources are the most crucial factors influencing research productivity. When addressed, these driving factors would motivate other driving factors, contributing to higher research productivity. In particular, these findings encourage higher education institutions to (1) efficiently allocate research funds and design mentoring programs, (2) offer efficient research incentive schemes, (3) develop initiatives that would support promising research proposals beneficial to the institution, and (4) collaborate with external organizations to grant funding for research proposals. These results contribute significantly to the literature as it provides meaningful insights that aid decision-makers in higher education institutions in resource allocation decisions, policy-making, and the design of efficient initiatives for augmenting their innovation potential.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Juan Francisco Mora-Sánchez, Josep Ribes, Josué González-Camejo, Aurora Seco and María Victoria Ruano    
This research lays a foundation for optimised membrane photobioreactor performance and introduces novel control parameters crucial for advancing microalgae cultivation techniques and promoting environmental sustainability. Particularly, this study presen... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Long-Xiao Luo, Zhong-Yi Sun and Zheng-Hong Tan    
Climatic seasonality has lacked research attention in terms of global tropical forests, where it impacts vegetation productivity, biodiversity, and hydrological cycles. This study employs two methods?climatological anomalous accumulation (CAA) and potent... ver más
Revista: Water

 
?tefan Markulik, Marek ?olc and Milan Filo    
The world is undergoing dynamic changes. For businesses, it brings positives, but also negatives. The positive is the global market for business. The downside of the global market is the increasing competitive pressure. Large enterprises with serial prod... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Chunhui Zhang, Wanyi Zhang, Chengjun Zhang, Liwei Zheng, Shiyi Yan, Yuanhao Ma and Wei Dang    
Variations in solar insolation caused by changes in the Earth?s orbit?specifically its eccentricity, obliquity, and precession?can leave discernible marks on the geologic record. Astrochronology leverages these markers to establish a direct connection be... ver más

 
Rael Adhiambo, Paul Kojo Mensah and Emmanuel Acheampong    
Climate change is a global threat that is better understood through global research spanning many regions, countries, and life-supporting ecosystems. This review focused on the bibliometric analysis of the distribution of a global research compendium on ... ver más
Revista: Water