Research performance and collaboration in the Novosibirsk region (original) (raw)
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Research in non-metropolitan universitiesas a new stage of science development in Russia
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Trends in Russian research output in post-Soviet era
Scientometrics, 2008
Recently, the Russian government has ordered evaluation and reform of the basic research system. As a consequence, the number of research staff at the Russian Academy of Sciences will be reduced by 20% by 2007. The basis for research evaluation and institute budgeting will be bibliometric indicators. In view of these changes we look at the Russian publication output and argue that (1) publication output and citedness have to be considered in relation to the level of expenditure on R&D; (2) bibliometric indicators depend strongly on the database used (ISI's databases are biased) and their interpretation can be confusing; better coverage of Russian publications or a Russian Science Citation Index are needed. Also, research results are communicated in more ways than paper publications. (3) policy makers have misused ISI statistics to demonstrate "a low level" of Russian R&D. Our paper is a part of a project designed to trace R&D development in a transition economy and knowledge transfer from basic research to innovation. Results of our project shed light on science policy and the social issues due to the indiscriminate introduction of quantitative indicators.
Herald of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 2014
* Vladimir Viktorovich Ivanov, Dr. Sci. (Econ.), is a deputy chief learned secretary of the RAS. Aleksandr Naumovich Libkind, Cand. Sci. (Eng.), is a sector head at the All Russia Institute of Scientific and Technical Information, RAS (VINITI RAS), and a leading research fellow at the Financial University under the Russian government. Valentina Aleksandrovna Markusova, Dr. Sci. (Ed.), is head of the RAS Department of Scientific Information Support for the RAS and Russia's Regions, VINITI RAS. * Journals with an impact factor of at least 4.5 that published three or more such articles.
Science and Technology Indicators in the Russian Federation: 2016
Institute for Statistical Studies and Economics of Knowledge, 2016
The present data book is another one in the series of publications, dedicated to different aspects of scientific development in the Russian Federation. It begins with tables, where together with the main science and technology indicators there are data concerning the main innovative activities. The publication presents statistics on R&D organisations, R&D personnel and funding as well as its material and technical facilities. In some sections you may find information about intellectual property, technology commercialisation and usage, international comparisons data. The data book includes the information of the Federal State Statistics Service, the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation, the Federal Servicefor Intellectual Property, the CIS Interstate Statistical Committee, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the European Commission, Eurostat, UNESCO, the World Intellectual Property Organisation, as well as results of methodological and analytical studies conducted by HSE Institute for Statistical Studies and Economics of Knowledge. In some cases the data amends the information published before.
Identifying Directions for the Russia's Science and Technology Cooperation
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Herald of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 2017
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Scientific and Technical Information Processing, 2014
The publishing activity of two major research communities, viz., the Russian Academy of Sci ences (RAS) and domestic universities, are discussed. The data sources are the Science Citation Index-Expanded (2007-2001) and the Journal Citation Reports (2011) databases. More than 140000 domestic papers and their citation scores, as well as the distribution of these papers by subject category and by their share in internationally collaborated papers (ICP), were analyzed. The analysis showed that the highest degree of international collaboration (coauthorship) of Russian scientists is characteristic of physics, inter disciplinary sciences, ecology, and agricultural sciences. The array under research yielded 3372 highly cited papers (the citation threshold being 30 and more times); the share of ICPs in this subarray was almost 90%.
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In this work, we studied the indicators related to the number of scholarly publications (Research Output (RO)) indexed in international databases as specified by the Russian government's scientific and technological development priorities. We further checked the precision of the method by which these priorities were defined. We proposed an alternative approach for measuring performance could be the use of article classification based on citation topics such as the Cluster topic prominence in science from SciVal (Elsevier) or Citation topics from InCites (Clarivate). We outline the priorities to achieve top ranks for Russia in 2030.
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