|
A lone researcher struggling to answer the "big question" in his
or her discipline tends to be the exception in academia these days.
Researchers in many fields prefer to work with others in and out of
their areas, in order to obtain complementary expertise, save time, or
decrease expenses. Other investigators enjoy collaborations with
researchers in differing subjects as a way of finding innovative
approaches to solving problems. Private and federal funding sources
encourage collaborative and multidisciplinary projects. Also, federal
law, such as the Bayh-Dole Act, promotes the commercialization of
patentable technologies developed at universities, thus allowing
relationships between academia and industry to grow. Although
collaborative and multidisciplinary research is flourishing, problems do
arise, and several factors must be considered:
- Difference in Style of Investigators - Shared grants, data,
and materials require more formal written agreements involving
grants-and-contracts offices at their respective universities.
- Difference in Style of Research Across and Within Disciplines
- Differences Between Academic and Industrial Research with
Respect to Sharing of Data and Results - Each party has to come to an
agreement about how data and materials will be shared. Most
institutions do not permit any sponsor hindrance or delay of
publication in research collaborations with industry. Other
universities are willing to forgo the freedom in exchange for funding,
access to industrial ideas, and opportunities to train students in
commercial types of research endeavors.
- Ethical Considerations May Affect Research Across Institutions
- for example, differences in the nature of disclosing potential
conflicts of interest, or differences in the standard of treatment for
research subjects.
Six key components of a successful collaboration are:
- Communication - In establishing, maintaining, and even
terminating a collaboration, communication
is important for the project to continue.
- Discussing in advance who will do what in a project, while
understanding that the research may evolve. Define goals, including who
will take charge, addressing the potential impact on participants if
the project changes direction, and defining when a collaboration is
considered to be over or terminated.
- Discussing authorship in advance.
- Discussing data and material management in advance - How such
a question is resolved affects the ability of the laboratories to
replicate work and to perform independent work at the end of a
collaboration. The issue of who owns data is governed by the type and
source of funds used to support research. The NIH and the NSF allow
grantee institutions to own data, a regulation with implications for
research done by collaborators off-site. Investigators and institutions
also have rules for the custody and retention of data, to which all
parties must adhere. Also, the transfer of materials among
collaborators is subject to so-called "material
transfer agreements," or MTAs, developed by administration offices.
They include:
- Limits on the use of the material, usually for non-commercial
research purposes.
- Prohibitions on the redistribution of the material.
- Conditions of use, including prohibitions of use in animals or
humans.
- Conditions for publication, usually with provisions that the
manuscript must be seen by the donor before submission for publication.
- A hold-harmless cause, meaning that the donor has no liability
resulting from the use of the material.
- The issue of the return of unused materials.
- Discussing intellectual property issues in advance - All
parties should know institutional and granting-agency policies
regarding intellectual property and patent procedures.
- Managing accountability - Each institution must abide by
certain regulations, policies, and laws. Researchers working with
animals, humans, or hazardous substances must conform to the
appropriate regulations, policies, and laws. Researchers also need to
inform one another of any potential conflict of interest that they
might have in the project.
UT Arlington Resources for Collaborations Include:
The
Office of Technology Management
OTM is responsible for identifying and patenting new inventions and
copyright materials, including software. The office helps inventors
develop the necessary documentation for patents and other kinds of
protection. Although the University
owns the intellectual property, the technology-transfer office works
with investigators to develop the best possible deal to benefit the
University and the inventor, as both may receive licensing revenues.
Personnel in OTM also interact with industry representatives to set up
collaborative research agreements, to inform them of new inventions, and
to negotiate license agreements. OTM also advises venture-capital groups
of new inventions and facilitates the start-up of new companies. OTM
will provide guidance about how researchers can protect their
inventions. If results of research are made public without first being
protected -- with a confidentiality agreement, materials-transfer
agreement, or patent application -- the monetary value of the invention
will be substantially reduced.
The
Office of Grant and Contract Services
Grants-and-contracts offices are permitted to submit sponsored project
proposals to all agencies (whether governmental or private) and to
negotiate and accept awards based on these proposals. The grants office
negotiates grants with industry, except for the intellectual-property
clauses, which are managed by the technology-transfer office.
- If a researcher enters a collaboration with a researcher in
another department while a grant is ongoing, they generally do not have
to formalize the relationship through the grants office.
- If, however, an investigator with an ongoing grant enters into
a collaboration with a researcher at another institution and money is
involved in the transaction, a subcontract is written and managed by
the grants and contracts office.
- If collaborators within an institution apply for a grant
together, they are both included in the personnel section of the grant.
- If collaborators from different institutions apply together
for a grant, a decision about who will be the prime institution and who
will be the secondary institution, obtaining a subcontract, has to be
made. Material-transfer and intellectual-property agreements also come
into play.
For more information: http://www.uta.edu/ra/index.htm.
|
|