Open Access
China's quantitative expansion phase: exponential growth but low impact
Bihui Jin,Ronald Rousseau +1 more
- 01 Jan 2005
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TL;DR: In this article, it is shown that although China's publication share in the world has been increasing exponentially, its impact defined as the number of citations per publication lags far behind.
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Abstract: It is shown that although China’s publication share in the world has been increasing exponentially, its impact defined as the number of citations per publication lags far behind. This state of affairs is expressed as a ‘quantitative expansion phase’. China’s science needs to move from the ‘quantitative expansion’ phase in which it is nowadays to a ‘rising quality’ phase. Correspondingly scientists’ motivation for publishing papers must shift from ‘driven by benefit’ to ‘driven by excellence and timeliness’. Currently, China’s science although blending into the world, is not yet a full player in its major league. Yet, all growth-related graphs show an exponential increase. Moreover, doubling times calculated in this article are clear indications that, despite obvious problems and short-comings, the quality of Chinese research as a whole is increasing very quickly. We conclude that, if the necessary measures are taken and the observed exponentially increasing trend continues, the impact of Chinese research results will soon catch up with that of other major countries.
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The scientific impact of nations
TL;DR: What different countries get for their research spending is illustrated in the chart below, which shows how research spending in these countries has changed over the past 50 years.
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Jacob Bronowski
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TL;DR: The book as mentioned in this paper traces man's rise from the flint tool to geometry, from the arch to the Theory of Relativity and explores the social and historical background that gave rise to those inventions, showing man's ability to understand nature, to control it and not be controlled by it.
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The Scientific Wealth of Nations
TL;DR: The United States took much pleasure last summer from its performance in the Olympic Games, where it won many more medals than any other country as mentioned in this paper. But was this the right measure of performance? Counting four points for gold, two for silver, one for bronze, and calculating the score relative to
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