Nature China Explained

Category:Science, Interdisciplinary
Website:http://www.nature.com/nchina/index.html
Publisher:Nature Publishing Group
Country:UK
Firstdate:January 2007
Lastdate:present
Frequency:Weekly
Issn:1751-5793

Nature China is an online publication by Nature Publishing Group (NPG) that highlights the best research being produced in Hong Kong and Mainland China in science and medicine. The international website was launched in January 2007. The Chinese website was launched on 25 April 2007. The site and its content is free-to-view for registered users.

Background

China's scientific research is growing faster than that of any other country. China has the world's second highest number of researchers, at 923,000, behind the United States. By the end of 2006, China will also become the world's second highest investor in research and development (R&D), again behind the United States, with a forecast expenditure of over US$136 billion (at Purchasing Power Parity) [1] .[2]

According to the Institute for Scientific Information (ISI), the output of research papers from China has soared from 10,000 papers per year in 1990 to over 80,000 papers per year in 2006. To put this in context, it is now at the same level as the United Kingdom and Japan. More importantly, the number of very high impact papers (top 1 percentile of ISI citations) has increased from 21 in 1994 to 223 in 2003 - a tenfold jump [3] .[4]

Aims and scope

The aim of Nature China is to give scientists and professionals worldwide an insight into the latest research from Hong Kong and Mainland China.

Each week, the editors of Nature China survey all scientific journals (both English and Chinese journals) to identify the best, recently published papers from Hong Kong and Mainland China. Unlike most NPG journals, Nature China only publishes Research Highlights (short 200-word summaries) that explain the importance of the latest scientific findings in Hong Kong and Mainland China.

The website also features a Recommended Paper section where users can recommend any Chinese research paper of interest, whether it is novel or controversial, provided it is not their own.[5] Users can also vote or comment on those suggestions already in the database.

The publication covers topics including:

ISSN

The electronic international standard serial number (eISSN) for Nature China is .

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. .China will become world’s second highest investor in R&D by end of 2006, finds OECD, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) (4 December 2006) Accessed April 4, 2007
  2. http://www.chinahearsay.com/?p=109 China R&D Spending Controversy
  3. .National Science Indicators, Institute for Scientific Information (ISI). Retrieved April 4, 2007.
  4. http://www.sciencewatch.com/sept-oct2004/sw_sept-oct2004_page1.htm Material Gain: China Advances in Scientific Output and Impact
  5. .Nature China FAQs, Nature China (2007). Retrieved April 4, 2007