A report published by the BBC today covers a phenomenon studied in depth by the Royal Society in the UK (the Royal Society is a centuries-old organization dedicated to the pursuit of science).
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-12885271
Briefly, the RS report analyses the number of scientific research papers emanating from the US and from China, as compiled by Elsevier, the leading science publisher, and concludes
The complete Royal Society report can be accessed here:
http://royalsociety.org/policy/reports/knowledge-networks-nations/?f=1
Now, the survey is pure quantification, looking only at the number of papers and does not go into the quality of the research, which would be impossible when you are talking about half a million academic articles per year.
And of course it covers published research papers and not secret military or commercial research, which is very important in both countries.
But based on raw numbers it does seem as if China will be the scientific world leader very soon.
The chairman of the report Professor Sir Chris Llewellyn-Smith says:
What do other Orbinauts think about this radical change in world scientific leadership?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-12885271
Briefly, the RS report analyses the number of scientific research papers emanating from the US and from China, as compiled by Elsevier, the leading science publisher, and concludes
China, after displacing the UK as the world's second leading producer of research, could go on to overtake America in as little as two years' time.
"Projections vary, but a simple linear interpretation of Elsevier's publishing data suggests that this could take place as early as 2013," it says.
The complete Royal Society report can be accessed here:
http://royalsociety.org/policy/reports/knowledge-networks-nations/?f=1
Now, the survey is pure quantification, looking only at the number of papers and does not go into the quality of the research, which would be impossible when you are talking about half a million academic articles per year.
And of course it covers published research papers and not secret military or commercial research, which is very important in both countries.
But based on raw numbers it does seem as if China will be the scientific world leader very soon.
The chairman of the report Professor Sir Chris Llewellyn-Smith says:
"I think this is positive, of great benefit, though some might see it as a threat and it does serve as a wake-up call for us not to become complacent."
What do other Orbinauts think about this radical change in world scientific leadership?