The German Research Funding Atlas has always attached great importance to analysing the subject profile of universities and non-university research institutions based on various key figures. The research cultures in the individual subjects differ considerably in some cases – be it in terms of the type and scope of publication output, the importance of citations or, as is predominant in the German Research Funding Atlas, in terms of third-party funding acquired: as a result, a university’s subject profile is a key factor that affects placings in the various rankings.
In terms of DFG third-party funding, for example, physicians at universities obtain around 30 per cent of all DFG approvals, but they only account for around 17 per cent of all professorships at universities. An above-average amount of funding also goes to the technical subjects: the number of approvals per professorship is very high in these disciplines.
The profile of a university shows potential for interdisciplinary cooperation at the site
The specific subject structure of an institution also indicates the particular potential for interdisciplinary research at that site: for example, a technical university with a strong medical department is well positioned to undertake research in medical technology, while a university with strengths in both computer science and the humanities brings together experts who can make a significant contribution to advancing the field of digital humanities. By making such profile information widely visible, the DFG Funding Atlas increases the appeal of appropriately positioned universities to internationally mobile researchers who wish to focus on precisely this type of interface.
Finally, subject profiles are also an important starting point for appropriate benchmarking: only if the subject structure of university X is similar to that of university Y can the overall figures for the two institutions be meaningfully compared.
Testing of new ways to visualise subject profiles
The German Research Funding Atlas report series has repeatedly explored new ways of presenting subject profiles. Between 2009 and 2015, visualisations were presented as disciplinary maps on which universities with similar profiles were positioned close to one other. In 2018 there was a switch to so-called Voronoi diagrams, while in the same year so-called word clouds were tested. The current edition uses treemaps and ring graphics.
Ever since the German Research Funding Atlas report series was first published, a ranking has been established of the 40 universities that have attracted the highest level of DFG funding. This provides a compact comparison of the universities’ profiles.