Science as a Public Good: Public Use and Funding of Science
Yian Yin, Yuxiao Dong, Kuansan Wang, Dashun Wang, Benjamin F. Jones

TL;DR
This paper develops a measurement framework linking scientific research, public funding, and societal use across various domains, revealing significant alignment between high-impact science, public consumption, and funding allocations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel framework that integrates large-scale datasets to analyze the relationship between science, public use, and funding across multiple domains.
Findings
Public uses of science are highly diverse across domains.
There is a universal alignment between high-impact science and public consumption.
Funding allocations closely match public use patterns across scientific fields.
Abstract
Knowledge of how science is consumed in public domains is essential for a deeper understanding of the role of science in human society. While science is heavily supported by public funding, common depictions suggest that scientific research remains an isolated or 'ivory tower' activity, with weak connectivity to public use, little relationship between the quality of research and its public use, and little correspondence between the funding of science and its public use. This paper introduces a measurement framework to examine public good features of science, allowing us to study public uses of science, the public funding of science, and how use and funding relate. Specifically, we integrate five large-scale datasets that link scientific publications from all scientific fields to their upstream funding support and downstream public uses across three public domains - government documents,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClimate Change Communication and Perception · scientometrics and bibliometrics research · Misinformation and Its Impacts
