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The rise of Saudi Arabia as a science powerhouse

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The rise of Saudi Arabia as a science powerhouse

Oil fuels Saudi Arabia’s rise as a regional science powerhouse.


http://www.natureasia.com/en/nmiddleeast/article/10.1038/nmiddleeast.2016.78

A new Nature Index supplement, dedicated to Saudi Arabia, charts the quick ascent of the desert kingdom’s scientific output over the past four years.
While Saudi Arabia is the world’s biggest oil producer, the country has directed a good portion of its revenue to improving education and research. These improvements are driven by a comprehensive national science strategy to be implemented until 2030. Over the past five years, it has made vast investment into high-tech universities and cutting-edge laboratories, and by 2015 Saudi Arabia became the Arab region's most prolific nation in research.

The index tracks this through a metric called weighted fractional count (WFC), which measures a country’s or institute’s contribution to research published in high-impact journals tracked by the index.

Saudi Arabia's global ranking in WFC has improved from number 39 in 2012 to 31, making it West Asia's second most scientifically productive country after Israel. Its WFC has more than doubled over the past year, making it the world’s eighth largest riser.

Chemistry is the main driver of Saudi Arabia's science boom, with chemistry-related papers making up two-thirds of the kingdom's research output.

Five research institutions are currently at the vanguard of Saudi Arabia's growing research landscape, and in the lead is King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST).

KAUST ranks first in the kingdom and 173rd globally, as per the Nature Index, and is the only Arab institute to be classified among the world's top 500 science institutions. “Chemistry, including materials sciences, is a central science with key implications in energy, water, environmental science and food, four of the main areas of activity at KAUST,” explains Jean Fréchet, KAUST's vice-president for research.

Different paths

Almost all Saudi Arabia’s research institutes are involved in strong collaborative efforts with international institutes. But the two leading institutions, KAUST and King Abdulaziz University (KAU), have different approaches. While KAU publishes more collaborative papers than KAUST, its overall contribution to joint research conducted is much smaller.

A visiting KAU professor suggests that “Saudi academics at KAU have consistently been encouraged to focus on tangible, applied research and are in general less abreast of cutting-edge science than KAUST's staff.”

However, much of KAUST’s research takes place at home, with KAUST researchers taking leading roles, says Christian Voolstra, a marine biologist at KAUST. “My lab has long-standing collaborations with the marine faculty from KAU where everybody benefits from everyone: KAUST benefits from the regional expertise of KAU, KAU benefits from the infrastructure at KAUST, and both institutions benefit from working with international collaborators,” says Voolstra.

Fréchet explains that KAUST’s approach differs from other scientific institutions because of the way it is structured. Based on the model of Caltech (California Institute of Technology), it works on small and highly-focused research in selected areas of science and engineering.

“We have 140 faculty members, recruited from the best institutions worldwide, whereas other universities are much larger with thousands of faculty members and tens of thousands of undergraduate students, which prevents them from being focused on a small number of research fields,” he adds.

Domestic and regional collaborations

While Saudi Arabia's domestic and regional scientific collaborations are dwarfed by the kingdom's joint scientific efforts with the United States, Asia and Europe, some institutes are actively pursuing collaborations with Saudi or Arab-based research centres.

King Faisal Specialist Hospital & Research Centre (KFSH&RC) leads the kingdom’s institutes when it comes to domestic collaborations, with nearly a third of all its research in partnership with other Saudi institutes. In contrast, the highest-ranking Saudi institutes in the index, KAUST and KAU, have the least domestic collaboration.

While chemistry takes the lion’s share of the kingdom’s collaborations, life sciences are the strong driver of domestic and regional collaborations.

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I was actually surprised to see Saudi Arabia ranked (much) higher than Iran and Turkey:

http://www.natureindex.com/annual-tables/2016/country/all


Each year, the Nature Index publishes tables based on counts of high-quality research outputs in the previous calendar year. It is important for users to understand that the data behind the tables are based on a relatively small proportion of total research papers, that they cover the natural sciences only and that outputs are non-normalized (that is, they don’t reflect the size of the country or institution, or its overall research output). We encourage users to combine the free-to-access Nature Index data with information from other sources.
 
Saudi Arabia is the most anti science country one could find on this planet. Their clerics to top leadership all hate science based education. Only scientific things they are interested in are weapons and oil.

Saudi Arabia Has Invested Heavily In The Best Facilities and Infrastructure.So It Is Understandable
Yet most of the students studying there are foreigners and not locals
 
Saudi Arabia is the most anti science country one could find on this planet. Their clerics to top leadership all hate science based education. Only scientific things they are interested in are weapons and oil.


Yet most of the students studying there are foreigners and not locals


Do I Really Care What A Spineless Indian Like You Thinks Now Get Lost :mad::mad::mad:
 
Is this suppose to be a joke? :lol:
Saudi arabia is nowhere near Iran or Turkey in science. I am still not able to post links, however go to SJR international science and check ranking for 2014. You'd see Iran is 16th, Turkey is 19th (though they have a higher H index compared to Iran) and saudi arabia is 35th.

Iran and Turkey have much higher growth compared to saudi arabia, meaning they have no hope of catching up. When it comes to science, only Iran and Turkey are to be considered as "powerhouses" in the region.
 
Saudi Arabia has never produced a single scientist. Iran has produced many scientists.

If we wanted to compare our history of science to them, they would be like microbes compared to us. We are talking in present, Iran is light years ahead. From the nuclear cycle which Iran mastered, stem cells, cloning, space launches, nanotechnology etc etc. Iranians even winning mathematics nobel prizes etc. They will at best be a "powerhouse" compared to the rest of the poor arab states, but in the region as a whole, they're nothing.
 
Stfu! How dare you call pindi born Pakistani an Indian?

I Know How 'Pakistani' You Are Now Get Lost Your Fellow Indian Countrymen Have More Grace Than You At Least They
Proudly Display Their Flag On Their Profiles
 
Saudi Arabia too hot for science.
Israel is also hot but puts all Muslim countries to shame when it comes to science.
Im sometimes asking myself if you are posting serious, anyways some of them are hilarious, i genuinely laughed at this one. :D
 
I Know How 'Pakistani' You Are Now Get Lost Your Fellow Indian Countrymen Have More Grace Than You At Least They
Proudly Display Their Flag On Their Profiles
شرم کر کچھ ۔ ہولی فیملی کی اولاد کی اتنی بے عزتی؟ کٹاریاں مارکیٹ آ ذرا
 
Each year, the Nature Index publishes tables based on counts of high-quality research outputs in the previous calendar year. It is important for users to understand that the data behind the tables are based on a relatively small proportion of total research papers, that they cover the natural sciences only and that outputs are non-normalized (that is, they don’t reflect the size of the country or institution, or its overall research output). We encourage users to combine the free-to-access Nature Index data with information from other sources.
Last year or so..there was a report talking about how Saudis paid big amounts to recognized scientists from West and East to come publish their work as Saudis'!! This led into an embarrassing investigation about fake statistics and papers....

I will be happy to see another Muslim nation to become a pioneer in science but that was a nice joke this thread!!
 
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