Consider the following statements regarding the 'Impact of Research and Innovation Scale (IRIS)' —
- It assigns a higher value to a research paper cited in policies than to a patented invention.
- It measures the impact of research in standardised units called publication-equivalents (PEs).
- Its primary objective is to replace all peer-reviewed publications with commercial devices as the main output of research.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Explanation – The Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) has proposed the IRIS scale to measure the impact of biomedical research. Under this scale, a research paper cited in policies or guidelines is assigned 10 publication-equivalents (PEs), whereas a patented invention is assigned 5 PEs, making statement 1 correct. The scale measures impact in standardized units called PEs, making statement 2 correct. However, IRIS does not aim to replace peer-reviewed publications but rather provides a standardized metric to recognize diverse forms of impactful research beyond conventional citations.
Explanation – The Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) has proposed the IRIS scale to measure the impact of biomedical research. Under this scale, a research paper cited in policies or guidelines is assigned 10 publication-equivalents (PEs), whereas a patented invention is assigned 5 PEs, making statement 1 correct. The scale measures impact in standardized units called PEs, making statement 2 correct. However, IRIS does not aim to replace peer-reviewed publications but rather provides a standardized metric to recognize diverse forms of impactful research beyond conventional citations.