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David G's avatar

In addition to federal research funds stagnating, the administrative overhead of doing science is also increasing significantly. A standard NSF proposal has about 15 pages of science + 100 pages of mandated documents, including conflict of interest spreadsheets, facilities lists, data management plans, postdoc mentoring plans, and so on. Every proposal has to include all this information even though less than 20% get funded. It can take at least 6 months and often over a year to get a decision on a proposal, so one has to be sending them out fairly frequently to keep up a funding stream. There is also a greater emphasis on partnerships and big collaborations to get research funding, but large collaborations have a much greater communication overhead. There are more administrative mandates that devour scientists’ time with limited positive feedback coming out of it.

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scott kirkpatrick's avatar

The metric for how many ideas we're finding, for example, counting Nobel Prizes, is hopelessly squishy. Some are given to scientists who have made many contributions, but the committee has to select just one (Einstein for the photoelectric effect -- they picked the work easiest to describe). And the impact of, say, the first observation of slightly higher superconducting temperatures, is many orders of magnitude less the identification of the structure of DNA or the observation of gravity waves.

The "Moore's Law" analyses of the exponential rate of growth of the capability of some particular technology are indeed the result overlapping curves in which each advance in the technology saturates. And the overall timescale is really the period of a cycle which passes through innovation, development of manufacturing capability, development of a market for the products, all feeding back to stimulate new innovation. Take batteries. If you plot watt-hours per kg from 1900 (Volta) to 2000 (Li-Ion), you find a doubling time of about ten years. That takes us from telegraph repeaters through flashlights to hand held power tools and leaf blowers. Opening of markets for cellphones and electric vehicles has almost certainly changed the slope of the curve by increasing the market pull, and introducing production facilities so expensive that much more R&D falls out of the investments, and the time permitted for recovering the cost has to shorten.

So I think that asking about the rate of science without looking for the obstacles to complete the cycle of adoption may miss the actual limiting steps.

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