It's hard to know what this means without the underlying data. The graph's implication is a decline in North American and EU science. But it's not a zero-sum game. It would not be surprising to find that, as Asians become more affluent, they are capable of doing a lot more science, increasing the total global amount of science now being done and therefore reducing the North American and EU share, even if we still do a lot of science too.
Interesting. For the EU, of course, you have the problem that its got bigger over time.
The other thing you would control for, were that possible, is CV-driven-publication; I would expect more worthless/duplicate articles nowadays than there used to be.
It's hard to know what this means without the underlying data. The graph's implication is a decline in North American and EU science. But it's not a zero-sum game. It would not be surprising to find that, as Asians become more affluent, they are capable of doing a lot more science, increasing the total global amount of science now being done and therefore reducing the North American and EU share, even if we still do a lot of science too.
ReplyDeleteThis would be a good thing.
Interesting. For the EU, of course, you have the problem that its got bigger over time.
ReplyDeleteThe other thing you would control for, were that possible, is CV-driven-publication; I would expect more worthless/duplicate articles nowadays than there used to be.