China’s research paper boom could be false prosperity, academician warns

Senior biologist Zhang Hong, a member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, warns that China’s boom in research papers may be a ‘false prosperity’ risking genuine innovation.

Senior biologist Zhang Hong, a member of the prestigious Chinese Academy of Sciences, has warned that China’s surge in research papers might represent a ‘false prosperity’ that endangers true innovation. In an article shared by science communication outlet The Intellectual on its social media on Monday, he described how projects are often inflated in scale to secure publications in elite journals like Science, Nature, or Cell, which are then leveraged for academic titles and additional resources.

“You often hear people boasting about publishing a paper that costs tens of millions of yuan in a top journal like Science, Nature or Cell. What they’re really showing off is how many resources they control,” Zhang said.

This approach excels at pursuing hot topics and scaling up existing ideas—known as “1-to-100” science—but it has crowded out the space, culture, and funding essential for groundbreaking “zero-to-one” innovations, according to Zhang, who works at the Institute of Biophysics in Beijing.

Makala yanayohusiana

China's state-run Economic Daily has published back-to-back front-page editorials rejecting claims that its economy is losing steam and causing a global 'China shock 2.0'. The outlet argues that rising protectionism, not China's strong exports, is the real global economic problem. It describes the 4.5 to 5 per cent growth target as a 'reasonable range'.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Over the past decade, Chinese think tanks have thrived with government backing and some independence, as retired officials joined, bringing expertise and connections. However, two recent corruption cases involving prominent think tanks have cast uncertainty over this model's future. Observers note that such ties could prove a double-edged sword.

At the AGI-Next summit in Beijing, Alibaba AI scientist Lin Junyang warned that China has less than a 20% chance of exceeding the US in artificial intelligence over the next 3 to 5 years due to resource limits. He pointed out the gap, with US firms like OpenAI pouring massive computational resources into next-generation research while China is stretched thin just meeting daily demands.

Imeripotiwa na AI

A senior scholar from China's Chinese Academy of Social Sciences has urged the establishment of an original knowledge system on border history to mitigate security risks from Western hostile forces. Fan Enshi warns of the threat of de-Sinicisation in US-led historical perspectives and calls for shifting from fragmented research to systematic domestic theories to better project Chinese influence internationally.

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