The inaugural
Reuters Top 100 survey was published on Wednesday
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U.S.
universities lead the world in scientific innovation but face strong
competition from Asian rivals with close ties to industry, according to a
detailed analysis of academic papers and patent filings.
The
inaugural Reuters Top 100 survey, published on Wednesday, places Stanford
University in top spot, reflecting its position as a crucible for new ideas at
the heart of Silicon Valley.
Stanford
alumni have gone on to create some of the world's biggest technology companies,
including Hewlett-Packard, Yahoo and Google.
The
top nine places are all taken by U.S. schools, with Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT) and Harvard University ranked second and third.
The
Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) was 10th, while
Imperial College London was the highest-ranked European in 11th place.
Asian
universities are a growing force in scientific innovation and have proved
particularly adept at turning this into products, with South Korea -- home to
rising tech giants such as Samsung -- scoring highly in patent approvals.
South
Korea has eight schools in the top 100 universities, while Japan has nine --
more than all countries bar the United States. China, however, had only one
entry on the list in Tsinghua University, ranked 72nd.
Policymakers
and corporations alike rely on universities to convert publicly funded science
into knowledge and ultimately new products that drive economic growth. But
while academic innovation is lauded around the world, it is not easy to
measure.
The
new Reuters league table aims to produce the most comprehensive and systematic
ranking to date by analysing 10 different measures, based on the volume and
impact of scientific research, the volume and success of patent filings and the
use of cited discoveries in the academic and corporate worlds.
Large, populous countries
inevitably score highly, so it is also instructive to look at relative
performance. Tiny Switzerland, with a population of eight million people and
two of the world's top drug companies, stands out with three schools on the
list, giving it more top 100 innovative universities per capita than any other
country.
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