Arthur,
 
You're not going to be able to determine the exact number of researchers in the
world and you will have to make good estimates. But there are direct
relationships between the number of researchers, the number of articles
published annually and the number of active peer-reviewed journals. Good 
sources
for methodology are my thesis 
-http://arif.jinhabrothers.com/sites/arif.jinhabrothers.com/files/aj.pdf (defend
ed and submitted this fall)
- Article 50 million 
-http://www.mendeley.com/research/article-50-million-estimate-number-scholarly-a
rticles-existence-6/
Methods and data are based chiefly on:
Bjork et al's studies on OA share growth 2006 to current
Mabe and Amin, Tenopir and King - works 1990s to early 2000s
Derek De Sallo Price - 1960s - the 'father of scientometrics.
- you can get the number of article from Bjork's methods and data and mine.
- you can get the number of researchers from UN data but there is ratio of
researchers to publishing researchers, and publishing researchers publish an
average of 1 article per year, so if you can determine good estimate for that
ratio you are on your way. You have good data on growth rates of researchers,
articles and journals, but growth rates have increased dramatically since 2000
as demonstrated in my thesis.  It got a bit complex and I tried to sort it best
I could in my thesis.
 
all the best,
 
Arif
 
 
 
----- Original Message -----
      From: Arthur Sale
To: 'Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)'
Sent: Saturday, December 31, 2011 6:25 PM
Subject: [GOAL] How many researchers are there?

I am trying to get a rough estimate of the number of active researchers in
the world. Unfortunately all the estimates seem to be as rough as the
famous Drake equation for calculating the number of technological
civilizations in the universe: in other words all the factors are
extremely fuzzy.  I seek your help. My interest is that this is the number
of people who need to adopt OA for us to have 100% OA. (Actually, we will
approach that sooner, as the average publication has more than one author
and we need only one to make it OA.

 

To share some thinking, let me take Australia. In 2011 it had 35
universities and 29,226 academic staff with a PhD. Let me assume that this
is the number of research active staff. The average per institution is
835, and this spans big universities down to small ones. Australia
produces according to the OECD 2.5% of the world?s research, so let?s estimate
the number of active researchers in the world (taking Australia as ?typical?
of researchers) as 29226 / 0.025 = 1,169,040 researchers in universities.
Note that I have not counted non-university research organizations (they?ll
make a small difference) nor PhD students (there is usually a supervisor
listed in the author list of any publication they produce).

 

Let?s take another tack. I have read the number of 10,000 research
universities in the world bandied about. Let?s regard ?research university? as
equal to ?PhD-granting university?. If each of them have 1,000 research active
staff on average, then that implies 10000 x 1000 = 10,000,000 researchers.

 

That narrows the estimate, rough as it is, to

         1.1M  < no of researchers < 10M

I can live with this, as it is only one power of ten (order of magnitude)
between the two bounds. The upper limit is around 0.2% of the world?s
population.

 

Another tactic is to try to estimate the number of people whose name
appeared in an author list in the last decade. Disambiguation of names
rears its ugly head. This will also include many non-researchers in big
labs, some of them will be dead, and there will be new researchers who
have just not yet published, but I am looking for ball-park figures, not
pinpoint accuracy. I haven?t done this work yet.

 

Can we do better than these estimates, in the face of different national
styles?  It is even difficult to get one number for PhD granting
universities in the US, and as for India and China @$#!

 

Arthur Sale

University of Tasmania, Australia

 

 

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