Doctoral research, as constructed by the PhD programme, is rarely constructed as a coherent body of knowledge which can inform disciplines and push forward science. This project explores the knowledge and impact of the research produced by PhD studies in UK universities.
Principal Investigators: Professor Catherine Montgomery, Education, catherine.montgomery@durham.ac.uk Dr Craig Stewart, Computer Science, craig.d.stewart@durham.ac.uk
Visiting IAS Fellows: TBC
Term: Michaelmas 2025
This project aims to explore the knowledge and impact of the research produced by PhD studies in UK universities. The project aims to reconceptualise doctoral research as critical site for the creation of new knowledge (Manathunga et al., 2022) and to surface its potential contribution to research capacity in the academy and the scientific community.
Doctoral research, as constructed by the PhD programme, is rarely constructed as a coherent body of knowledge which can inform disciplines and push forward science. There is a lack of studies that have consistently and system project aims to surface under-used doctoral research and explore its contributions to knowledge and disciplines. Since 2019, Prof Montgomery and Dr Stewart have been working in partnership with the British Library focusing on their EThOS collection, a digital repository of approximately 637,000 doctoral theses completed in UK universities. The power of this vast resource of research was already being explored by organisations such as the FLAX project (led by a New Zealand university), the Royal Society of Chemistry, and the Alzheimer's Society but previous use-cases of the EThOS repository involved laborious and time-intensive by-hand searches (Montgomery, 2019; 2020; Montgomery and Poli, 2024; Montgomery et al, Forthcoming). The project has developed a prototype of an Artificial Intelligence tool which substantially speeds up and facilitates analysis and can narrow down a large set of theses to a more relevant subset. It uses clustering and text summarisation to automatically organise the theses into a user-specified number of categories, based on their content. The team has trialled the new tool with community and scientific organisations which include Kew Science and the Museum of London Archaeology. Original research unknown to these organisations was surfaced.
There are three strands of this Major Project are:
Project activities:
Project outputs: *New version of the tool and further testing with scientific and community partners through the British Library’s network
*Seminar at the British Library, engaging their EThOS project team and their digital scholarship research teams and 2 seminars at Durham in IAS to present the outcomes of the three areas of research: themes and networks; technologies and tools; and histories and philosophies.
*10 life histories of Southern, transcultural and/or Indigenous doctoral scholars whose theses appear in the EThOS repository
*Plan for further funding application and 3 joint published papers and a book proposal