论文部分内容阅读
搞科学研究、获诺贝尔奖未必就能保证一个国家经济上强盛——一份呈递给科学技术常务委员会科学政策特别工作组的研究报告作出了以上结论。此项研究是由美国国会图书馆国会研究处的克里斯托弗·T·希尔和琼·D·温斯顿进行的.他们发现,以国内产品总值或劳动生产率的平均增长率计,从1945年以来人均获诺贝尔物理及化学奖少些的国家,经济反而要好些。但他们也发现,获诺贝尔奖的学科与引用所发表的科学文献的数量之间有着密切的联系。
Engaging in scientific research and obtaining a Nobel Prize may not necessarily guarantee a country's economic prosperity - a study presented to the Scientific and Technical Standing Committee's Science Policy Task Force made the above conclusions. The study, conducted by Christopher T. Hill and Joan D. Winston of the Congressional Research Office of the Library of Congress in the United States, found that from 1945 on average, gross domestic product (GDP) or labor productivity Since the per capita Nobel Prize for Physics and Chemistry fewer countries, the economy has been better. But they also found that there is a close link between the Nobel Prize-winning disciplines and the number of scientific references cited.