http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/india-china-now-surpass-russia-in-scientific-research/398262.html


India, China Now Surpass Russia in Scientific Research 
27 January 2010
Reuters
WASHINGTON - Political turmoil, a brain drain of scientists and waning interest 
have transformed Russia from a nation that launched the first satellite into an 
increasingly minor player in the world of science, according to a report 
released Tuesday.

An analysis of research papers published by Russian scientists shows an almost 
across-the-board decrease, which reflects Russia's shrinking influence not only 
in science but in science-based industries such as nuclear power, the authors 
of the Thomson Reuters report said.

"Russia's research base has a problem, and it shows little sign of a solution," 
the report reads.

"Russia has been a leader in scientific research and intellectual thinking 
across Europe and the world for so long that it comes not only as a surprise 
but a shock to see that it has a small and dwindling share of world activity as 
well as real attrition of its core strengths," it says.

In October, more than 170 expatriate scientists signed a letter to President 
Dmitry Medvedev and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, complaining about "the 
catastrophic conditions of fundamental science."

"While other countries have increased their research output, Russia has 
struggled to maintain its output and even slipped backwards in areas like 
physics and space science, historically its core strengths," said Jonathan 
Adams, director of research evaluation at Thomson Reuters, parent company of 
Reuters.

More information on the research is available at 
Researchanalytics.thomsonreuters.com/grr.

Adams and colleagues use a Thomson Reuters database to track scientific 
publications.

Russian research accounts for about 2.6 percent of the world's papers published 
in journals indexed by Thomson Reuters over five years, the report found.

"For comparison, this is more than Brazil (102,000 papers, 2.1 percent of 
world) but less than India (144,000 papers, 2.9 percent) and far less than 
China (415,000 papers, 8.4 percent)," it says.

The main focus was on physics and chemistry, with little research in 
agriculture or computer science.

The United States, the world leader in scientific research, has displaced 
Germany as the top collaborator with Russian researchers, the report found.

"The opportunities for other countries to link to Russia's institutions of 
learning must be extensive," the report reads. "The gains for partners are 
likely to be significant, based simply on Russia's historical contributions. 
But partners may need to bring resources to the party to enable Russia to 
participate."

Cuts in funding and an aging work force have not helped, the report says.

"By one 2007 account, a few of the best Russian research institutes have 
budgets for research amounting to 3 to 5 percent of comparably sized institutes 
in the United States," the report reads.

The average age for a member of the Russian Academy of Science is above 50, and 
the prestige of a field that gave birth to Sputnik as the ultimate expression 
of Cold War rivalry has plummeted. Just 1 percent of Russians polled in 2006 
named science as a prestigious career.


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