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Analysis suggests China has passed U.S. on one vital science and research measure, the top 1% citations

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Analysis suggests China has passed U.S. on one vital science and research measure, the top 1% citations​

Researchers use new method to show impact of Chinese studies

Ohio State News
Mar 08, 2022

After decades of dominance by the United States, a new measure suggests that China edged the U.S. in 2019 on one important measurement of national research success.

Findings showed Chinese research ranked as high as or higher than U.S. work in the top 1% of scientific studies in 2019. This work is considered the most notable published science.

The new analysis, published recently in the journal Scientometrics, was done by three researchers: one from the United States, one from Europe and one from China. The measurement method used by the trio is different from what has traditionally been used – and they say it is more appropriate to the task.

“We feel strongly that we have a better way to measure the impact of research when comparing nation-to-nation output,” said study co-author Caroline Wagner, an expert on science policy and R&D investment and faculty member in the John Glenn College of Public Affairs at The Ohio State University.

“Using our measurement, China now has a slight lead over the U.S. in terms of scientific impact.”

Wagner conducted the study with Lin Zhang of Wuhan University in China and Loet Leydesdorff of the University of Amsterdam in The Netherlands.

While there is no objective way of measuring the quality of research studies, scientists have traditionally used a proxy called citations. The more a study is mentioned (or “cited,” as it is called) by other researchers in subsequent papers, the more impact it is seen as having on the field and the more it is assumed to be of high quality.

The gold standard is reaching the top 1% – those scientific papers that are cited more often than 99% of others.

“These are the works that are seen as being in the class of Nobel Prize winners, the very leading edge of science,” Wagner said. “The U.S. has tended to rank China’s work as lower quality. This appears to have changed.”

The issue is that papers in some scientific fields are generally cited much more frequently than papers in other fields. For example, the top papers in virology are cited more often than the top papers in sociology.

So what researchers have traditionally done is “field normalization,” in which citation data are averaged in such a way as to allow the two fields to be compared side-by-side, taking into account statistically the differences in how citations are used in each of the fields.

When this method of measurement is used, the United States remains in the lead of producing top 1% papers.

But Wagner and her colleagues say weighting papers differently by scientific field makes no sense when you’re comparing the research output of nations.

“When you’re comparing one scientific field with another, then weighting by field makes sense. But it doesn’t make sense when you’re measuring the overall impact of one nation’s science versus another, and it in fact produces erroneous results,” Wagner said.

Instead of weighting citation results differently for papers in separate fields, Wagner and her colleagues simply combined papers in all fields and then calculated how nations compared using the raw citation data.

The researchers used the Web of Science database, which provides comprehensive citation data for studies in a wide variety of scientific disciplines. Using their measurement method, they found that China passed the United States for the top position in 2019, after passing the European Union in 2015.

In 2019, 1.67% of scientific articles with Chinese authors were in the top 1% of the most highly cited articles, compared to 1.62% of articles with U.S. authors. The U.S. was slightly ahead in 2018.

Even measurements using field normalizations have shown China to be improving rapidly in quality, even if they don’t show China ahead of the United States. For example, in 2000, 1.77% of U.S articles were in the top 1%, compared to only 0.37% of Chinese articles, according to a report by the National Science Board.

But by 2016, that gap had closed considerably according to the field-normalized statistics: In that year, 1.88% of U.S. articles were in the top 1% and China was closing in with 1.12% in the highest ranks.

Overall, it has been widely recognized that China’s total research output has been growing quickly in the past decade or more, Wagner said.

“But many experts had been saying that China was still lagging in quality, so there was no need for Western countries to worry. We don’t think that gap exists anymore,” she said.

“In an incredibly short time, China has advanced from far behind to producing research at the leading edge of science in some fields.”

These new results showing China in the lead should help inform decisions on how the United States funds science, Wagner said.

“In the United States, we rely on science and technology for our national security, for our economy and for our health care,” she said. “Being the world leader has been critically important to our economic success. A change in this position needs scrutiny.”

 
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In science and research, with adequate funds and government policy support, China is overtaking US in both quantity and quality.
 
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China leads world in top scientific papers, new study finds​

  • Study takes a fresh look at calculation of most-cited papers, finds Chinese researchers ahead in volume and quality
  • But the rankings may change if the country closes itself off from the outside world, they warn



Published: 10:00pm, 12 Mar, 2022

China overtook the United States in top scientific studies in 2019, four years after it reached the same milestone against the European Union, according to a study by researchers from the US, China and Europe.

The study, published in the journal Scientometrics on March 2, was based on a reassessment of the top most-cited articles, a closely watched indicator of scientific influence.

Under the traditional indicator of the top 1 per cent of most cited research papers, the US still leads China.

However, the researchers noticed that China was coming up at the top of a number of measures, but not on the top 1 per cent index, study co-author Caroline Wagner, an associate professor at the Ohio State University, said.

“We decided to look at how the top 1 per cent is calculated. When we examined the measure, we questioned the approach being used. When we recalculated, we found that China was at par or in the lead on key measures,” she said.

The researchers concluded that the previous measurement may have obscured that China was operating at world-leading levels of scientific output in both volume and quality.

Using the existing measure, each field of scientific research is delineated and given a weighting before an overall calculation of the most-cited papers is made.
But the new study argues that weighting studies by scientific field makes no sense in comparing the research output of a nation.

“When you’re comparing one scientific field with another, then weighting by field makes sense. But it doesn’t make sense when you’re measuring the overall impact of one nation’s science versus another, and it in fact produces erroneous results,” the university’s website quoted Wagner as saying.

Wagner and her colleagues used the Web of Science database, which covers citation data for a range of academic disciplines, and used the raw citation data for papers in all fields to make their comparison.

They concluded that in 2019, 1.67 per cent of scientific articles with Chinese authors were in the top 1 per cent of the most-cited articles, compared to 1.62 per cent of articles with US authors.

Loet Leydesdorff, co-author of the study and an honorary fellow at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands, said the study ran counter to the Western perception of science in China.

“The arguments in many Western governments and society are that … China already surpassed the United States in terms of the total publications, not the top publications,” Leydesdorff said.

“That’s often being said about China and we say that’s no longer true.”
Wagner said China had made significant investment in research and development, in scientific infrastructure, and in the mobility of students and scholars.

“These are steps that any nation takes to enhance their scientific capacity, but China has done this on a very large scale,” she said.
“Government policy has targeted leading areas. These investments and policy actions appear to be paying off in terms of scientific quality.”

Late leader Deng Xiaoping described science and technology as one of the four forces of modernisation in the late 1970s but it was not until the 1990s that it really became a national strategy.

China’s expenditure on R&D as a share of its gross domestic product increased from less than 1 per cent in 1980 to 2.4 per cent in 2020, according to Wagner.
The country’s spending on R&D hit a new high last year, with total R&D expenditure amounting to about 2.79 trillion yuan (US$440 billion), up 14.2 per cent from the previous year, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

It overtook the US in terms of the total number of science publications in 2018, according to the US National Science Foundation.
And a Japanese study released last year found that China had overtaken the US in the number of top 10 per cent academic papers, though the US still led in the top 1 per cent of citations.

However, Leydesdorff cautioned that China might not stay in the top spot if “it is closing itself from the outside world”.

Wagner said there were clear measures showing that China was reducing international cooperation.
“There are many possible reasons for this drop, including political pressures and tensions,” she said.

“China has also made some statements that indicate the intention to reduce engagement. This would be a mistake: good ideas come from collaboration. Everyone benefits from more good ideas being shared.”

 
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How many citations does an individual needs to have to be in that 1%?

I’m sitting at 160, will probably reach 200-220 by year end.
 
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China overtakes the US in terms of research quality, finds study

22 Mar 2022 Laura Hiscott

microscope-in-lab-1184182378-iStock_RyanKing999-Web-635x424.jpg

Taking the lead While China has already overtaken the US in terms of the quantity of scientific research, a new study suggests it has caught up in terms of quality too. (Courtesy: iStock/RyanKing999)

The quality of China’s scientific research output exceeded that of the US in 2019. That is according to a new analysis by researchers in the US, which also found that China had already overtaken the European Union in terms of research quality by 2015.

China’s total research output has grown rapidly in recent years, but there has been a widespread belief that the “quality” – judged by the number of citations papers receive – is not as high as other countries. A common measure of a nation’s research quality is the percentage of its papers appearing in the top 1% of the most-cited papers globally. Since citation practices vary widely across disciplines, researchers typically weight the citation data of papers according to their fields, before comparing countries’ scientific output. When comparing field-weighted citation data, the US has a higher percentage of research in the top 1% worldwide than China does.

Although this weighting practice makes sense when comparing papers from different fields, Caroline Wagner of Ohio State University argues that it is not appropriate when comparing the overall research outputs of different countries. Together with Lin Zhang of Wuhan University and Loet Leydesdorff of the University of Amsterdam, Wagner analysed citation data contained in the database Web of Science and used the unweighted data to quantify different countries’ research quality.

They found that 1.67% of papers with Chinese authors were in the top 1% most-cited articles in 2019 compared with 1.62% of papers with US authors.

Wagner believes that China’s rapidly rising scientific impact is due to its large-scale investments in research and development, scientific infrastructure and the mobility of students and scholars. She also points out that government policy has targeted leading areas of research.

“We need to think about scientific capability, not as a race, but as a frontier of knowledge,” Wagner told Physics World. “China is now operating at the frontier, along with several other nations, including the US and a number of European nations, Japan and South Korea.” Wagner is now investigating how the US can exploit new knowledge “no matter where it is developed”.

 
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US shouldn't be the leader in science when chinese are doing all the work for them.
 
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Time to settle with this reality and fact, USA is USA and China is China.

The USA is about her oligarchs while China is all about her people.

That is why homelessness and food banks are on the rise in the US.

China is surging ahead with or without the USA.

For a nation of 1.4 billion like China to achieve a high income status is not easy task.
 
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US shouldn't be the leader in science when chinese are doing all the work for them.
Straight to the core.
For whom are you doing all the work?

This is Modi-style statistics. Glad to see for the sake of our right-wing friends that his methods are now becoming universal.

It's simple; (1) change the method; (2) show a tiny difference and proclaim it to the world; (3) ignore the past statistics and past methodology usage, and display this as an overtake.
 
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