Nature Index

The research publishing gender gap is slowly getting better

A study by Nature Index and OpenAI has shown that the gender gap in chemistry and physical sciences is widest in countries with the highest percentage of female authors. It uses chatbot ‘ChatGPT’, created by OpenAI, to infer author genders on the basis of their most likely country of origin and the name–gender association trends in that country.

There is a reason why Asian countries are leading in green materials

Denmark has seen a steady increase in its share in materials science across the five years of Nature Index’s latest analysis, with a rise of 15% across the period. China and Singapore were the only two countries to have a high international collaboration scores between the two countries. Researchers working with their Chinese counterparts in Singapore could make up for high international collaboration scores.

Top performers have not changed in Australia’s landscape

Researchers in India, the US, and the UK have started to share their research openly for the first time in the first five years of the 21st century, according to a report by Nature Index. The number of publications has increased by more than 90% between 2013 and 2019, with the US, the UK and Australia sharing the most number of articles.

The guide is about the nature index

The number of articles in Nature Index journals that have been co-authored by two institutions from South Korea or India is taken from the count of the total number of articles. Each article with at least one author from one of the countries or institutions is given a Count of 1 for each one. Pohang University of Sciences and Technology was bigger in physical sciences than in natural sciences.

Chinese science still has potential to grow

The Nature Index, which tracks international research collaborations, has found that China’s researchers are now working with scientists in countries taking part in the Beijing government’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). According to data from the Nature Index, China’s researchers are increasingly working with scientists in countries taking part in the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

China has a strong research clout that leads to growth in science publishing

China is leading in areas of “relative weakness” in the global publishing system, Shu Fei, a researcher at Hangzhou Dianzi University in China, said. China’s areas of weakness have the highest percentage of internationally collaborative papers in Nature Index, Fei said. She added China wants to become more involved in helping to shape how the global publishing system works.