ARTS-S EN0001-In tech race with China, US universities may lose a vital edge

原文

The U.S. is still out in front of global rivals when it comes to innovation, but American universities—where new ideas often percolate—have reason to look over their shoulder.
That's especially true for technologies like 5G phone networks and artificial intelligence. They're exactly the fields where President Donald Trump recently insisted the U.S. has to lead—and also the ones where Asia, especially China, has caught up.
Universities from China get more patents than their U.S. peers in wireless communications, according to research firm GreyB Services. In AI, 17 of the top 20 universities and public research organizations are in China, with the Chinese Academy of Sciences topping the list, says the World Intellectual Property Organization in Geneva.
There's a special place for universities in the ecosystem of research. Universities groom future scientists and can be incubators for pie-in-the-sky ideas—some of which turn out to be game-changers. The list ranges from Google's search engine to DNA technology that's behind a whole industry of gene-manipulating treatments.
However, government grants to universities have been stagnant for more than a decade, meaning they've declined in real terms and as a share of the economy.
"If you look at the federal dollars, they've not really changed substantially," says Stephen Susalka, head of AUTM, a technology transfer association whose members include 800 universities. "Other countries are catching up. We can't sit on our laurels."

生词

vital
adjective, necessary for the success or continued existence of something; extremely important
edge
noun, an advantage over other people
rival
noun, a person, group, etc. competing with others for the same thing or in the same area
look over your shoulder
to behave in a way that shows you feel nervous about something that might happen
percolate
verb, If a liquid percolates, it moves slowly through a substance with very small holes in it
patent
noun, the official legal right to make or sell an invention for a particular number of years 专利
peer
noun, a person who is the same age or has the same social position or the same abilities as other people in a group
firm
noun, a company offering a professional service, for example a company of lawyers
Geneva
noun, 日内瓦
ecosystem
noun, 生态系统
groom
[T] to prepare someone for a special job or activity
incubator
noun, 育成中心;培养器
pie in the sky
something that you hope will happen but is very unlikely to happen:
e.g. Their plans to set up their own business are just pie in the sky
grant
verb, to give or allow someone something, usually in an official way
stagnant
adjective, not growing or developing
decline
verb, to gradually become less, worse, or lower
in real terms
扣除物价因素;按实质计算
federal
联邦的
substantially
adverb, to a large degree
e.g. The new rules will substantially change how we do things.
laurels
noun, praise for a person because of something they have done, usually in sport, the arts, or politics

posted on   荷楠仁  阅读(368)  评论(0编辑  收藏  举报

编辑推荐:
· .NET Core 中如何实现缓存的预热?
· 从 HTTP 原因短语缺失研究 HTTP/2 和 HTTP/3 的设计差异
· AI与.NET技术实操系列:向量存储与相似性搜索在 .NET 中的实现
· 基于Microsoft.Extensions.AI核心库实现RAG应用
· Linux系列:如何用heaptrack跟踪.NET程序的非托管内存泄露
阅读排行:
· TypeScript + Deepseek 打造卜卦网站:技术与玄学的结合
· 阿里巴巴 QwQ-32B真的超越了 DeepSeek R-1吗?
· 【译】Visual Studio 中新的强大生产力特性
· 【设计模式】告别冗长if-else语句:使用策略模式优化代码结构
· 10年+ .NET Coder 心语 ── 封装的思维:从隐藏、稳定开始理解其本质意义

导航

统计

点击右上角即可分享
微信分享提示