Scientists often communicate open research questions. Sometimes such questions are
crowdsourced and/or aggregated, sometimes supplemented with priorities or other details. A common way open research questions are identified, communicated, established/confirmed and prioritized are their inclusion in
scientific reviews of a sub-field or specific research question, including in
systematic reviews and
meta-analyses. Other channels include reports by
science journalists and dedicated (sub-)websites such as 80000hours.org's "research questions by discipline" or the
Wikipedia articles of the
lists of unsolved problems, aggregative/integrative studies, There have been online surveys used to generate priority research topics which were then classified into broader themes. Such may improve research relevance and value or strengthen rationale for societal dedication of limited resources or expansions of the limited resources or for
funding a specific study.
Prioritization and evaluations In terms of
priorities and related concepts, the proposed strategy of
differential technological development suggests research to focus primarily on questions and tools that are thought to increase safety and mitigate issues rather than risky technologies which are instead best to delay. Concerning
control strategies for gene drives, researchers have however cautioned that such may lead to a counterproductive false sense of security. Not all technological progress may be beneficial in general or in contemporary contexts (environments or systems) and various research may for example
result in engineered pandemics. Many studies "ask uninteresting research questions, [and] make only marginal contributions". One study suggests that while research on climate change "is valuable, it does not tackle head-on the most urgent question: how to change society to
mitigate climate change right now". In the ethical framework of
effective altruism, research questions with the greatest potential benefits from
investments (not necessarily of financial nature) are identified to maximize research benefits.
80,000 Hours has compiled a small list of "Research questions that could have a big social impact, organised by discipline".
ICTs, participation and routine procedures Platforms, e.g.
citizen science ones, can "support identification of problems, formulation of research questions, and study design". Participatory research can "improve study outcomes and foster greater data accessibility and utility as well as increase public transparency". Participants can have continued discussions and
iterations regarding new questions. Research questions can be or are positioned at varying levels of detail – from broad to very specific questions – which are semantically or can be displayed as nested – for instance via category trees. In one platform, about
invasion science and based on
Wikidata, users "can zoom into the major research questions and hypotheses" of the field, "which are connected to the relevant studies published in the field and, if available, the underlying raw data" with tools like the Wikimedia project
Scholia. Individuals "who can ask novel, field-altering questions" may vary from "those who can answer them" or vary per question. Translation of a (societal)
problem "from its meaning in an everyday context into a scientifically valid research question means defining the
goals of research in such a way that their contribution to practical solutions of a societal problem is narrow enough to be useful". Both everyday practical knowledge and scientific knowledge play a role in this process. Identification of open research questions may be useful for the adoption and application of science in society and accelerating specific
research and development. There has been a suggestion for establishing a public non-profit organization that would identify "gaps in the science that need addressing", referring to the field of
sustainable food system.
Examples and breadth of "research questions" Similar to outlining open research questions, there have also been proposals to e.g. combine specific fields or sources of data and knowledge as the subject or method of new research or to engage more and more scientifically in specific research topics along with the establishment of new high-quality data gathering systems. One approach for the generation of research questions is [identifying, highlighting, and] challenging
assumptions of existing theories and studies. Sometimes research questions overlap with or also refer to challenges of a specific theory or field such as
how to solve known problems with the Standard Model. Research
issues and
knowledge gaps can also overlap or be synonymous. Examples of lists of open significant research questions in reviews include a list of "major outstanding questions" for (
applied) human
life extension, open research questions for
digital twins (across fields), open questions in performance measurement of
sustainable supply chains, knowledge gaps in
antimicrobial resistance, and unaddressed or neglected questions in the literature about
100% renewable energy systems. == Types and purpose ==