What the study found
The study found that system mapping methods can be used to visualize the PCORnet infrastructure and its data activities. The authors say these maps provide a new tool for making the network’s design and architecture more accessible.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors conclude that visualizing network architecture is important for improving the utility of national clinical research networks for large-scale research. They also suggest the approach can support collaboration, transparency, and dialogue with patient partners about the strengths and potential limitations of the infrastructure.
What the researchers tested
The researchers applied system mapping methods to PCORnet, a national clinical research network. They used this approach to characterize the key actors, relationships, and exchanges in the infrastructure for data activities, with attention to multisite and multinetwork research and patient-centered comparative clinical effectiveness research (CER).
What worked and what didn't
The mapping methods and maps described in the paper were presented as a way to visualize how PCORnet is designed to fulfill distributed queries. The abstract says these maps offer a new tool and help characterize commonalities and heterogeneity among clinical research network infrastructures based on data management and sharing activities.
What to keep in mind
The abstract does not provide detailed results about specific network components or quantitative performance. It also does not describe limitations beyond noting that the approach is meant to improve transparency and dialogue about infrastructure strengths and potential limitations.
Key points
- System mapping was used to visualize the PCORnet infrastructure.
- The paper focuses on data activities, including data management and sharing.
- The maps are described as a new tool for making PCORnet more accessible to collaborators.
- The authors say the approach can support collaboration and transparency in a learning health system.
- The abstract does not report detailed quantitative results or performance measures.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- PCORnet mapping reveals infrastructure complexity and variation
- Authors:
- Nikolas Koscielniak, Stacey Chang, Natalie Privett, Erin Holve
- Institutions:
- Origin Energy (Australia), Origin Energy (Australia), Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute
- Publication date:
- 2026-01-08
- OpenAlex record:
- View
- Image credit:
- Photo by Marek Studzinski on Unsplash · Unsplash License
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