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【Science】关于中国科研文化[精华]



2010年9月3日,《科学》发表了施一公和饶毅的评论性文章


关于中国科研文化


China's Research Cultur

Science 3 September 2010:Vol. 329. no. 5996, p. 1128


Government research funds in China have been growing at an annual rate of more than 20%, exceeding even the expectations of China's most enthusiastic scientists. In theory, this could allow China to make truly outstanding progress in science and research, complementing the nation's economic success. In reality, however, rampant problems in research funding—some attributable to the system and others cultural—are slowing down China's potential pace of innovation.

Although scientific merit may still be the key to the success of smaller research grants, such as those from China's National Natural Science Foundation, it is much less relevant for the megaproject grants from variousgovernment funding agencies, which range from tens to hundreds of millions of Chinese yuan (7 yuan equals approximately 1 U.S. dollar). For the latter,the key is the application guidelines that are issued each year to specify research areas and projects. Their ostensible purpose is to outline "national needs." But the guidelines are often so narrowly described that they leave little doubt that the "needs" are anything but national; instead,the intended recipients are obvious. Committees appointed by bureaucrats inthe funding agencies determine these annual guidelines. For obvious reasons, the chairs of the committees often listen to and usually cooperate with the bureaucrats. "Expert opinions" simply reflect a mutual understanding between a very small group of bureaucrats and their favorite scientists. This top-down approach stifles innovation and makes clear to everyone that the connections with bureaucrats and a few powerful scientists are paramount, dictating the entire process of guideline preparation. To obtain major grants in China, it is an open secret that doing good research is not as important as schmoozing with powerful bureaucrats and their favorite experts.

This problematic funding system is frequently ridiculed by the majority of Chinese researchers. And yet it is also, paradoxically, accepted by most of them. Some believe that there is no choice but to accept these conventions. This culture even permeates the minds of those who are new returnees from abroad; they quickly adapt to the local environment and perpetuate the unhealthy culture. A significant proportion of researchers in China spend too much time on building connections and not enough time attending seminars, discussing science, doing research, or training students (instead, using them as laborers in their laboratories). Most are too busy to be found in their own institutions. Some become part of the problem: They use connections to judge grant applicants and undervalue scientific merit.

There is no need to spell out the ethical code for scientific research and grants management, as most of the power brokers in Chinese research were educated in industrialized countries. But overhauling the system will be no easy task. Those favored by the existing system resist meaningful reform. Some who oppose the unhealthy culture choose to be silent for fear of losing future grant opportunities. Others who want change take the attitude of "wait and see," rather than risk a losing battle.

Despite the roadblocks, those shaping science policy and those working at the bench clearly recognize the problems with China's current research culture: It wastes resources, corrupts the spirit, and stymies innovation. The time for China to build a healthy research culture is now, riding the momentum of increasing funding and a growing strong will to break away from damaging conventions. A simple but important start would be to distribute all of the new funds based on merit, without regard to connections. Over time, this new culture could and should become the major pillar of a system that nurtures, rather than squanders, the innovative potential of China.

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施一公、饶毅谈中国科研文化:经费未起到应有作用


http://news.xinmin.cn/rollnews/2010/09/03/6631996.html


 编者按:施一公是清华大学生命科学学院教授、院长,饶毅是北京大学生命科学学院教授、院长。近日,两位科学家联合撰文,讨论目前中国的科研基金分配体制及科研文化问题。他们在文章中指出,尽管近年来中国研究经费持续以20%的比例增长,但这种增长没有对中国的科学和研究起到应有的强大的促进作用,现行的科研基金分配体制甚至在某种程度上阻碍了中国创新能力的发展。他们认为,目前正是中国打破研究基金管理中各种潜规则、建立健康研究文化的时机,一个简单但重要的起点是所有新的研究基金必须基于学术优劣分配,而不再依赖私人关系。

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作者:admin@医学,生命科学    2011-01-18 11:50
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