scholarly journals Competition and forecasts for Nobel prize awards

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
THEODORE MODIS

The evolution of Nobel prize awards is studied as a learning/growing process. A simple logistic function describes the data well and accounts for the competition, be it between individuals or between nations. The American niche appears to be 64% exhausted by 1987, implying a diminishing expected rate of laureates in the future. Europeans have been losing ground continuously from the beginning while the remaining world has recently received more awards. Projections to the year 2000 and beyond are given. Correlations with age support the Darwinian nature of the competition for Nobel prizes. Awards to women show peaks coincidental with outbursts of feminism.

1985 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 198-210 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert L. Carpenter

This study uses a Delphi technique to estimate the likelihood of a set of change statements concerning emotional disturbance/behavioral disorders. Using a national random sample of 900 teachers, special education administrators, and school psychologists through two rounds of responses, estimates are made regarding the likelihood and the desirability of the condition represented by each statement occurring by the year 2000. Results are compared by variables of experience in the field, occupation, and level of educational attainment. Despite certain significant differences between groups the preponderant conclusion is that there is general agreement among the population surveyed regarding their expectations and sentiments about the future of the field.


2017 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael P. Cameron

“Prediction is very difficult, especially about the future.” This quote is attributed to Danish physicist and Nobel prize winner Niels Bohr, but the difficulty of making predictions does not stop us from making forecasts of economic, demographic, and other variables. Investors, businesses, policy makers and others use these forecasts to inform their decisions about investments and policy settings where understanding of the future trajectory and levels of costs and benefits are essential. One key example is forecasts of future population. The size and distribution (whether geographic, age, ethnic, or some other distribution) of the future population is a critical input into urban and other planning. Understanding the methods and limitations of forecasts is an important but often underappreciated task for planners and policymakers.


Author(s):  
Rajinder Singh

In India the development of modern science is closely related to its colonial background, a subject well documented by historians. So far as the prestigious Nobel Prizes are concerned, little has been mentioned in the colonial context. This article shows that in the first half of the twentieth century only a few Indian physicists and chemists were either nominees or nominators. Some of them were Fellows of the Royal Society. A comparison of Indian Nobel Prize nominators and nominees with other so-called Third World countries and colonies suggests some interesting results, for example the similarities of development of physics and chemistry in the colonized and ruling countries. The present article also suggests that the election of the Fellows of the Royal Society from India, in the fields of physics and chemistry, reveals a pattern comparable with that of Nobel Prize nominations and nominees.


1968 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 348-389 ◽  

Hermann Joseph Muller died on 5 April 1967, at the age of 76, after several years of struggle with a heart condition. Biology has lost one of its outstanding pioneers and leaders. His decisive contributions—both in theory and in experiments, many of them in advance of his time—opened and marked step by step the trail from the Mendelism of the 1910’s to the molecular biology of the 1960’s. His last two papers—prepared in 1965 and 1966—‘The gene material as the initiator and the organizing basis of life’ (369) * and ‘What genetic course will man steer?’ (372)—give a grand view of that trail, of where it has led and of which biological issues the knowledge so acquired presents to mankind. In the public mind Muller’s eminence is based on his vast and profound contributions to experimental genetics, his discovery of the mutagenic effects of ionizing radiations—which motivated the award of the Nobel Prize in 1946—and his efforts to make the genetic hazards of radiations understood and to limit these hazards. There is a widespread tendency to dismiss his concern for the future course of human evolution, and in particular his practical proposals for voluntary germinal choice, as senile deviations, amusing if they were not fraught with danger. Two facts show how wrong is this belief. * Numbers in parentheses refer to publication number in list of published works. Sentences in inverted commas without numbers are from two autobiographical manuscripts of 1936 and 1941, respectively.


After two years of study the report of the Workshop on Alternative Energy Strategies (W.A.E.S.) was released in early May 1977 in the fifteen national capitals of the Workshop members. W.A.E.S. is an ad hoc , international project involving 75 individuals from 15 countries. Its objective is to describe a range of feasible alternative energy strategies to the year 2000 for the nations of the World Outside Communist Areas (W.O.C.A.). These 15 countries are major energy consumers, using some 80% of the energy consumed by W.O.C.A. in 1972. Three are also important oil producers and exporters - Iran, Mexico and Venezuela. World oil production is expected to decline before the end of the century under almost any set of world conditions. W.A.E.S. evolved out of the common concern of a number of influential people in various parts of the world who believed that the transition from oil to other energy sources needed to be widely understood and effectively managed in order to avoid major national and international dislocations. The first major task of W.A.E.S. was to identify and agree on the major determinants of future energy supply and demand, to select a range of likely values for these determinants, and to develop a conceptual framework for bringing together the various national and global studies in a way that would be internally consistent, clearly visible and understandable. World energy prices, the rate of world economic growth and national energy policy were selected as the principal determinants of future energy supply and demand to 1985 and to the year 2000. A range of assumptions for each of these key variables was tested and adopted. Specific cases, based on combinations of these principal determinants, were selected to span a wide range of likely future energy supply and demand patterns. ‘Scenario’ is the term used for each case. A ‘scenario’ is not a forecast of the future. Rather, it represents a plausible future constructed from certain specified variables. Adding up the estimates of energy demand and supply for W.A.E.S. countries for each ‘scenario’ of the future, plus estimates for other countries have made it possible to evaluate future world energy balances or imbalances under particular sets of assumptions. The objective of this approach has been to understand better, quantitatively and qualitatively, the major energy issues and choices of the future and to identify which long term strategies will be most useful in balancing future world energy supply and demand. For example, at some point, perhaps before the year 2000, the cumulative national demands for oil imports may well exceed the cumulative potential for oil exports. Years before this happens nations must develop realistic national energy strategies which take account of such a situation. This requires action on a very broad scale, long before such a gap might actually develop, to ensure a smooth transition from energy systems largely based on oil to systems based on other energy sources such as coal and nuclear fuel. The time at which, and the degree to which, the transition from oil to other energy sources is perceived, understood, accepted and acted upon within and among nations will be crucial to an orderly world energy transition. This lecture, which followed the public release of the report, includes a review of the principal conclusions, the methodology used for making supply and demand projections to the year 2000, and some implications for national action and international collaboration. I am honoured to speak to you on the occasion of this first lecture sponsored by the Fellowship of Engineering in conjunction with the Royal Society. Once before I was at a meeting of the Royal Society as a listener, not a speaker. It was in March 1941 at the Society’s rooms at Burlington House. I was in England with Professor J. B. Conant establishing a London office for the conduct of cooperation and liaison between the American scientific efforts in the development of new weapons and the notable efforts going forward in the United Kingdom. I recall the interesting timing device monitoring speakers which went from a green light to yellow at nine minutes and from yellow to red at ten minutes. I copied this device for our Energy Workshop. I needed it only once - at our first meeting. Thereafter, interventions were less than nine minutes.


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