Science in Turbulent Times. Federal Demonstration Partnership August 28, 2012

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Transcription:

Science in Turbulent Times Federal Demonstration Partnership August 28, 2012

As Charles Dickens would say.. We re living in the best of times And the worst of times 2

On the one hand We re living in the best of scientific times 3

Advances in science are coming at a fantastic pace The rate of incremental advance is accelerating New technologies are enabling quantum jumps in understanding With great practical significance Transformative or breakthrough research is getting easier to get funded High risk/high payoff 4

Science and technology have never been more important or prominent in modern life 5

Some major global societal issues 6 Environmentally sustainable development Need for renewable energy sources Information and communications technology Universal access to education Poverty and economic opportunity Technology-based manufacturing and jobs Intellectual property rights Terrorism International security Natural disasters Science and technology capacity building Vaccines and medical therapies against infectious diseases Quality and accessibility of health care

Corollaries: For people to prosper in modern society, they need fundamental understanding and comfort with S&T For nations to prosper they need Scientific capacity National policies that reflect the best science For science to prosper, the science-society relationship must be positive and strong 7

At the same time, the scientific enterprise is experiencing some significant turbulence 8

An array of forces are converging to make the overall climate for science rocky, at best 9

Some of the forces are internal to science 10

An array of issues within science are not going so well and negatively affect the broader (societal) context for science Incidents of scientific misconduct Human subjects concerns Animal welfare issues Conflict of interest problems Publishing by press release Hyperbolic or exaggerated claims Appearing to suppress dissenting views Mistakes in scientific papers 11

These are factors internal to science There are external pressures as well Not all are bad But shouldn t be ignored 12

Science is becoming more global And America s pre-eminence is at risk 13

More and more countries are investing in science and building their own national science enterprises The motivation is typically tied to Solving local problems Overall health and quality of life of their people Innovation and the economy 14

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Funding is the BIG external factor Prospects are iffy at best 18

Trends in Federal R&D percent of GDP 1.4% 1.2% 1.0% 0.8% Total R&D Development 0.6% 0.4% 0.2% Research Facilities 0.0% 1976 1978 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: Up to 1994 - National Science Foundation / National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, Survey of Federal Funds for Research and Development; 1995 to Present - AAAS Report: Research and Development series; GDP figures are from Budget of the U.S. Government FY 2013. FY 2012 and FY 2013 figures are latest estimates. 19 2012 AAAS

Trends in R&D by Agency in billions of constant FY 2012 dollars 180 160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 ARRA Funding All Other USDA NSF NASA DOE NIH DOD 0 1978 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: AAAS Report: Research & Development series. FY 2012 and FY 2013 figures are latest estimates. 1976-1994 figures are NSF data on obligations in Science the Federal in Turbulent Funds Times survey. - FDP 2012 20 2012 AAAS

Trends in Research by Agency, FY 1975-2013 Billions of FY 2012 Dollars $80 $70 $60 $50 $40 $30 $20 $10 $0 1975 1977 1979 1981 1983 1985 1987 1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 ARRA Research Other USDA DOD NASA DOE NSF NIH Source: 1975-1994 figures are from the NSF federal funds survey; remainder is from AAAS R&D reports. FY 2012 figures are latest estimates, FY 2013 is the President's budget. 21 2012 AAAS

R&D as Percent of the Federal Budget: FY 1962-2013, in outlays 12% 10% 8% 6% 4% 2% 0% 1962 1965 1968 1971 1974 1977 1980 1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 Total R&D / Total Budget Nondefense R&D / Total Budget Source: AAAS, based on Budget of the U.S. Government FY 2013 Historical Tables. FY 13 data are budget proposals. 2012 AAAS 22

What about THE SEQUESTER? 23

Federal Nondefense R&D Under BCA Caps With and Without Sequestration in billions of constant FY 2012 dollars $85 $80 $75 ARRA $70 Nondefense $65 $60 Under BCA Caps $55 $50 $45 $40 Under Sequestration Under NDD Cuts Only 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 Source: Based on AAAS estimates of R&D funding and the FY 2013 budget, and CBO analyses of the Budget Control Act. 2012 AAAS

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Never Discuss Floods With Noah In the Audience 26

The regulatory burden problem FDP said (2007) 42% of an American researcher s research time is spent on administrative tasks! Some of it s the government Some of it s the universities themselves 27

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Pipeline problems Have we enough new scientists coming along? Aging of the young investigator pool NSF new PI is 6-7 years post-ph.d. (about 36 or older) NIH age 42 for Ph.D. s, 44 for M.D. s Are we stifling creativity? Too many postdocs before independence 30

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Solutions to the pipeline problem Don t need more advice Don t need more mentoring Multi-post-doc world K s galore Do need grants Reasonable size and duration 33

Solutions to the pipeline problem Give them decent grants NSF CAREER Awards NIH Pathway to Independence Awards New Howard Hughes program Just give them R01 s 34

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These are all issues parochial to the science community And solvable internally Maybe At least approachable internally 37

The science-society relationship is not so smooth 38

Public sentiment is everything. With public sentiment, nothing can fail; without it, nothing can succeed. Abraham Lincoln 39

People generally still respect science and technology. 40

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Source: Pew/AAAS Survey, 2009 43

They have little understanding of what is and is not science 60% of Americans believe in extrasensory perception 47% still do not answer true to the statement: Human beings developed from earlier species of animals 41% think astrology is somewhat scientific 44 Science and Engineering Indicators, 2004

Science-society tension can result from Widespread misunderstanding Vaccines and autism GMO s Political or economic inconvenience Climate change Conflict with peer group beliefs Conflict with core human values 45

Current scientific issues that abut against core values Embryonic stem cell research Studying personal topics Sex Genetics of behavior Teaching Intelligent Design versus evolution in science classrooms Origins of the universe Synthetic biology Neuroscience mind/body issues 46

Only scientists are stuck with what science says The rest of the public can disregard, deny, or distort findings With relatively little immediate consequence 47

The purpose of science is to tell us about the nature of the natural world Whether we like the answers or not! 48

This science-society tension has consequences Science is less able to serve societal needs Public support of science is undermined Society wants to exert influence on what science is (or is not) done 49

What to do about the science-society tension? 50

We always feel we need more public education or communication about science And we do 51

But here s where we need to get a bit more nuanced 52

The right approach to communication depends on the goal: Simply share the excitement Garner public support of scientific research Fulfill broader impacts or other outreach requirements of funding Traditional public communication might well do Solve problems and reach common ground Need to shift to public engagement approach 53

We often can t just educate our way out of science-society tension The problem is not just lack of understanding People do understand much of what we re saying or want to do They don t like it The conflict with their core values trumps their view of societal benefits 54

In public engagement we are changing not only the style and content but also the intent of the conversation: Communicating to the public Communicating with the public 55

We need to listen to the public about: Their concerns about science and technology and their concomitants Risks and benefits Encroachment on human values Their priorities among research areas Questions they would like or need us to answer Help frame the research agenda 56

Effective science communication is not easy Many scientists are not prepared to talk about their work and its implications with the public Listening to and respecting public concern can be difficult for scientists It s a learned skill 57

www.aaas.org/communicatingscience 58

Science in 59

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We ve learned some important lessons 61

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Differences in Communication Styles 63

People need to know about science as an enterprise What makes something scientific? What research is all about? What is and isn t research? The limits of scientific investigation Natural explanations of the natural world 64

The gist of the message is all that matters No caveats or clauses 65

The way an issue is framed can make all the difference Climate change more acceptable as a concept if seen as a technological challenge, not as a regulatory issue 66

We need to remain the fact people Leave your personal values at home It s unfortunate that scientists are also people Credibility is conferred by the audience, not the speaker 67

Go Glocal! Julia Taguena Parga, 2005 68

Glocal = working with local opinion leaders and resources Local media and op-eds Clergy School officials Local government leaders/politicians Science museums and centers Community groups Town meetings 69

In-person engagement works best Group problem solving Hands-on exhibits or demonstrations Lab visits, science camps, museums Science fair Science café Over the neighbor s fence 70

Engage with, don t harangue, the public 71

Public engagement is best when it focuses on something A contentious topic A problem to solve An opinion you really want New and diverse ideas 72

In public engagement, we do seek common ground But may have to settle for better understanding and respect.daniel Yankelovich, 2010 73

Understanding must work both ways Public understanding science Scientists understanding the public 74

Public Science We Need the S&T Community and the Public Going in the Same Direction Public 75