Is What I'm Doing in Research Truly Research?

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The discussion centers on the nature of academic research, particularly in the context of working within a Research & Development organization. The original poster questions whether their activities—analyzing problems, studying existing knowledge, and writing reports—constitute true research. They express a sense of uncertainty about the originality of their work, feeling that they are primarily exploring established concepts from different angles rather than creating something entirely new.Participants in the discussion emphasize that research often involves continuous inquiry, with new questions arising even after previous ones are answered. They suggest that knowing when to stop a specific research topic can depend on factors like personal interest, funding availability, and the exhaustion of relevant questions. The conversation highlights the importance of motivation and the iterative nature of research, where the pursuit of knowledge is ongoing and can lead to deeper exploration within a niche area.
ank_gl
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what is research? how would you define it? what am I doing if I am researching?

Ok, that's pretty vague. I am talking about academic research. I have been working in a so called Research & Development organization for past two years, and no doubt, I am loving it. I love the freedom, I love the docile(ductility maybe :D) nature of my bosses. All in all, its good.

However, I sometimes wonder, if what I am doing is really research? I get a problem statement, I study the phenomenon, study the causes, understand the mechanism of process, maybe predict the behavior of our product, write a report and holla! move on to next.

What I am really doing is understanding what is already known. Maybe few times, I do end up looking at a concept from entirely another prospective, maybe a different understanding, another implication. But mostly, everything is there, we are just trying to look it & then look from various angles. And that is all there is to it.

Is this really what research means? I mean, you just keep wandering, absent minded, and suddenly a realization hits you & you are soo excited, move on, same wandering starts again with something else . Or have I just drifted away?

I mean, there is soo much information already available, how can I ever do something entirely new?

PS: If you are thinking of blasting me for my immature thinking, don't bother:zzz:
 
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ank_gl said:
PS: If you are thinking of blasting me for my immature thinking, don't bother:zzz:

Not at all. But I would suggest that Google and Wikipedia are your friends. Great research tools available to all.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Research
 
thanks wuli, but that's not what I meant.

what I was(am) looking for was(is) what people in similar profession feel? How do you feel content with the lifestyle? What motivates you? how do you plan the next step? and most importantly, how do you know when to stop?
 
ank_gl said:
how do you know when to stop?

When you've saved enough money to retire on, of course!
 
... how do you know when to stop in a specific research topic?
 
ank_gl said:
... how do you know when to stop in a specific research topic?

When you're sick of it/when you don't get anymore funding to do this.

There are always more things you can investigate about something. There are always questions popping up. Once you've answered them, there are already new questions that are waiting. So you can go on in a specific research topic for a long long long time.
 
if you build up a repoirtore in a niche, you're chances of getting grants in that niche or much better than other topics.
 
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