The National Science Board releases annual statistics on the volume of peer-reviewed articles published in science and engineering journals and conference papers, broken down by country. Despite shifts over the past decade, the Western world still has the largest research output relative to population size. China has recently developed a slight advantage in research volume over the U.S., but its population is over four-times greater. India is about twenty-times more populous than the United Kingdom, but the two countries have had similar research outputs over the past decade. 

However, research output is growing at a much quicker rate in the developing world than the West. While output has nearly doubled among upper-middle income countries (as defined by the National Science Board) over the past decade, research output among high-income countries has shown a downward trend. Nations with strong, consistent growth in research output are found globally, including Russia, Brazil, Iran and Malaysia.


Chart made by Jinso. Data Source: National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, National Science Foundation; Science-Metrix; Elsevier, Scopus abstract and citation database.


Lower-middle and low-income countries have not shared the same recent growth in research output as upper-middle income countries. Research output also does not necessarily reflect readership and impact since the most popular journal publications are still based primarily in North America and Western Europe. 

Chart made by Jinso. Data Source: National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, National Science Foundation; Science-Metrix; Elsevier, Scopus abstract and citation database.

Supporting and accelerating the trend towards greater research production in the developing world requires several structural changes to the academic community. Investing in education before the university level can ensure nations globally are producing enough university students to maintain research output. Resources must also be dedicated to professors so they can buy equipment, perform studies, and receive support and incentives for research. 

Online frameworks are also contributing to the rise in accessibility to research, and Jinso is the latest development. Jinso is a network for scholars, connecting high school students and other young researchers to experienced mentors. Jinso also allows professors to become research mentors for others on the platform, earning extra funding to support their own research. The connections Jinso develops allow for researchers anywhere to be connected to leading experts and journals in their field.


GitHub is a popular platform used by computer scientists to manage their collaborative projects, but a similar program does not exist for academic work. There is no standard platform to create work, connect with others, and share work in one place. Most platforms only fall into one or two of these categories.The Jinso collaboration tool is a better way for groups to work on projects. By bringing the entire academic collaboration process onto one tool, it simplifies workflows and communication.The first steps for using the Jinso platform are:

Create an account
Create your first group

Once a user builds a network, they can create new Groups that consist of their network members. By default, the creator of a group is the admin. The most common Group is a research group, but the platform can manage several other types of academic projects. Platform users can create study groups for sharing course materials or groups of club members for extracurricular work.The admin of the Group has the ability to add new members at any time.
Admins are also responsible for creating Projects within Groups.

A Project for a research group is usually a research paper, but Projects can also be other forms of documents that could benefit from discussion and revisions. Examples include study guides, business plans, articles, and essays. Each Group can have an unlimited number of Projects within it, and all Projects within a Group are shared among the same members. 

Once a user builds a network, they can create new Groups that consist of their network members. By default, the creator of a group is the admin. The most common Group is a research group, but the platform can manage several other types of academic projects.

Platform users can create study groups for sharing course materials or groups of club members for extracurricular work.The admin of the Group has the ability to add new members at any time. Admins are also responsible for creating Projects within Groups.

A Project for a research group is usually a research paper, but Projects can also be other forms of documents that could benefit from discussion and revisions. Examples include study guides, business plans, articles, and essays. Each Group can have an unlimited number of Projects within it, and all Projects within a Group are shared among the same members. 

Example of Research group
Revisions of the paper

When a new Project is created, an initial revision must be shared. This can either be plain text or a PDF.
The Project will be immediately visible to all Group members with the first revision shown. Group members can comment on the revision with questions or feedback, and others can reply to comments.When another revision of the paper has been completed, the Group admin can add a new revision to the same Project.
The revision will become visible above the prior revision, and it will have a new comment box associated with it. Projects make it simple to keep track of a paper’s entire revision history and discussions at each stage. 

For each revision, Group admins can also create subtasks. Arrows allow Group members to view all of the different subtasks and comment on them individually. Subtasks allow a paper to be analyzed in unique components. For example, a research paper can have a unique subtask for each of its sections, and collaborators can discuss them all separately in the comment boxes. Jinso is a quicker way to collaborate on long-term projects. It makes it easier to connect, share, and manage the development of ideas and papers. You can create a Jinso account and start using the platform today for your research and academic needs at jinso.io.

The National Science Board releases annual statistics on the volume of peer-reviewed articles published in science and engineering journals and conference papers, broken down by country. Despite shifts over the past decade, the Western world still has the largest research output relative to population size. China has recently developed a slight advantage in research volume over the U.S., but its population is over four-times greater. India is about twenty-times more populous than the United Kingdom, but the two countries have had similar research outputs over the past decade. 

However, research output is growing at a much quicker rate in the developing world than the West. While output has nearly doubled among upper-middle income countries (as defined by the National Science Board) over the past decade, research output among high-income countries has shown a downward trend. Nations with strong, consistent growth in research output are found globally, including Russia, Brazil, Iran and Malaysia.


Chart made by Jinso. Data Source: National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, National Science Foundation; Science-Metrix; Elsevier, Scopus abstract and citation database.


Lower-middle and low-income countries have not shared the same recent growth in research output as upper-middle income countries. Research output also does not necessarily reflect readership and impact since the most popular journal publications are still based primarily in North America and Western Europe. 

Chart made by Jinso. Data Source: National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, National Science Foundation; Science-Metrix; Elsevier, Scopus abstract and citation database.

Supporting and accelerating the trend towards greater research production in the developing world requires several structural changes to the academic community. Investing in education before the university level can ensure nations globally are producing enough university students to maintain research output. Resources must also be dedicated to professors so they can buy equipment, perform studies, and receive support and incentives for research. 

Online frameworks are also contributing to the rise in accessibility to research, and Jinso is the latest development. Jinso is a network for scholars, connecting high school students and other young researchers to experienced mentors. Jinso also allows professors to become research mentors for others on the platform, earning extra funding to support their own research. The connections Jinso develops allow for researchers anywhere to be connected to leading experts and journals in their field.


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