Title: Recreating the Creative Environment
1Recreating the Creative Environment
- Donald W Braben
- Venture Research International
- and
- Department of Earth Sciences
- University College London
- don.braben_at_btinternet.com
- University of Uppsala
- 2 March 2009
2Universities before 1970
- Autonomy generally protected by governments
-
- Tenured staff were usually given modest funds
that they could use to tackle any problem that
interested them - Thus, the environment automatically encouraged
and fostered creativity without constraints -
3Universities after 1970
- Governments have increasingly interfered in
university governance, and in academic research
strategy - Universities treated increasingly as if they were
businesses - spending public money
- Creation of league tables
- Trust between governments and the academic sector
has virtually disappeared -
4Some 20th century discoveries
- Max Planck
Discovered that energy is quantised - Albert Einstein Photoelectric effect.
Special and General relativity - Ernest Rutherford Founded
nuclear physics - Paul AM Dirac
Predicted existence of positrons - Wolfgang Pauli
Exclusion principle. Predicted existence of
neutrinos - Erwin Schrödinger Founded
wave mechanics - Werner K Heisenberg Founded
quantum mechanics. Uncertainty principle - Alexander Fleming
Discovered penicillin - Enrico Fermi
Built first nuclear reactor - Oswald T Avery
Discovered that DNA is the genetic molecule - Linus Pauling
Seminal work on the nature of the chemical bond - Dorothy C Hodgkin Pioneered
X-ray diffraction techniques - Max Perutz
Discovered structure of haemoglobin - Francis Crick
- and James D Watson Discovered
double-helix structure of DNA - John Bardeen,
- Walter H Brattain,
- and William B Shockley Invented the
transistor - Dennis Gabor
Invented holography
5The Planck Club
- My affectionate name for a fictitious Club
comprised of the scientists listed in Slide 3
together with some 300 others of similar calibre
whose collective scientific discoveries
transformed the 20th century - Indeed, the Planck Club in many ways defined the
20th century - I do not know of any member of that Club who
needed to apply for a peer-reviewed grant
6Academic Research
- Academic research has played a vital role in the
global economy - Almost every 20th century Planck-Club member
worked at a university or a similar institute - Will the universities spawn a 21st century Planck
Club?
7Changes to academic research introduced post
1970
- Written proposals essential
- Mandatory peer review of proposals peer preview
- Research prioritised
- Timetables and milestones
- The need to publish in high impact-factor
journals - Assessment of university departments
- Constraints thereby introduced are outside an
individual researchers control. They lead to
exploration by road map - They reduce freedom and inhibit creativity
- That is no way to reach the unknown
8Loss of youthful leadership?
- Average age at first tenured appointment
- 2006 42 (US)
- Up to 1960s 25-30
- Average age of Nobel Prize winners
- 1997-2006 66
- 1961-1970 56
9Industrial Research
- Basic exploratory research has virtually
disappeared - Time-horizons have been sharply reduced
- Benchmarking
10Research Funding
- Average OECD expenditure on RD as a percentage
of Gross Domestic Product - 1981 1.95
- 2005 2.30
-
- RD investments are increasing in quantity (a
total of 687 billion in 2005). - Money is not the problem, therefore. But what
about the quality of these investments? - Observable A dearth of major scientific
discoveries
11Some quotes
-
- Jules Henri Poincaré (1854-1912) Science is
built up with facts, as a house is with stones.
But a collection of facts is no more a science
than a heap of stones is a house. - Linus Pauling (1901-94) I have always liked
working in some scientific direction that nobody
else is working on. - Richard Feynman (1918-88) answering the question
how can one win a Nobel Prize? Its easy. Find
out what your friends are doing, and go in the
opposite direction. But above all, enjoy what you
do.
12Sciences Breakthrough of the Year, 1996 2006,
and Molecule of the Year, 1989 1995
- 2006 Proof of Poincarés conjecture
- 2005 Evolution in action Understanding
evolutionary mechanisms - 2004 Exploration of Mars Data from Rovers
- 2003 Dark energy dominates universe
- 2002 Small RNAs operate many cellular controls
- 2001 Nanotechnology The first molecular scale
circuits - 2000 An explosion of gene sequencing data in
bacteria and humans - 1999 Ability to isolate and maintain human
pluripotent stem cells in culture - 1998 Evidence that the expansion of the universe
is accelerating - 1997 Lamb cloned from a single cell of an adult
sheep - 1996 Protease inhibitors and chemokines can
block HIV replication - 1995 Confirmation of a new state of matter
Bose-Einstein Condensates - 1994 DNA repair enzyme system
- 1993 Tumour suppressor protein, p53
- 1992 Nitric oxide
- 1991 Buckyballs (Buckminster fullerenes)
- 1990 Manufacture of synthetic diamonds
- 1989 Polymerase chain reaction
13The quality of exploratory research
- A new criterion for the assessment of exploratory
research proposals. Quality here is related to
the probability of achieving a high-potential
objective. It is dependent on -
- the nature of the objective (open-ended research
higher quality) - the nature of the approaches to risk
- minimise the risk? - i.e. action by the
agency ( lower quality) - manage the risk?- i.e. action by the
researcher ( higher quality) - the levels of trust (higher levels of trust
higher quality) - the relative value of money (fewer competitors
higher quality) - constraints on the use of funds (fewer
constraints higher quality)
14Venture Research
- Its primary objective is to help create a 21st
century Planck Club
15Ernest Rutherford (1871-1937)
- When money is short, there is no alternative but
to think.
16 Venture Research Strategy
- Aims to stimulate unpredictable discoveries.
Fosters individual freedom, and creates an
environment in which applicants can select
themselves. - Some details
- Funds should be "free"- that is available for
use as required - No boundaries
- No deadlines
- No milestones
- No peer review
- No priorities
- No specific objectives other than to understand
or explore - Researchers free to go in any direction at any
time - Risk to be selected and managed by the
researchers - Above all, it aims to foster mutual trust and
respect
17Risk and research
- Risk chance
- Risk danger
- Research is difficult but it is not intrinsically
risky - The more we associate risk with research the more
we devalue research enterprise
18Schematic A spectrum of research (1)
100
Mainstream research
Probability of success
0
High
Low
Potential Impact
19Schematic A spectrum of research (2)
100
Probability of success
High-risk, high-reward research
0
High
Low
Potential Impact
20Schematic A spectrum of research (3)
100
Venture Research
Probability of success
0
High
Low
Potential Impact
21Venture Research 1980 1990
- Supported exploratory academic research in any
field, anywhere. - Total BP expenditure 15 million
- Final number of research programmes 26
- Number of scientific breakthroughs at least
14 - Subsequently, there has been strong industrial
interest in their development. Estimated value
over the next decade 1 billion.
22Some Venture Research Discoveries
- Mike Bennett
- and Pat Heslop-Harrison Discovered a new
pathway for evolution and genetic control - Terry Clark Pioneered the study of macroscopic
quantum objects - Stan Clough
- and Tony Horsewill Solved the quantum-classical
transition problem by developing new
relativity and quantum theories - Steve Davies Developed small artificial enzymes
for efficient chiral selection - Nigel Franks,
- Jean Louis Deneubourg,
- Simon Goss, Chris Tofts Quantified the rules
describing distributed intelligence in animals - Herbert Huppert
- and Steve Sparks Pioneered the new field of
geological fluid mechanics - Jeff Kimble Pioneered squeezed states of light
- Graham Parkhouse Derived a novel theory
of engineering design relating performance to
shapes and materials - Alan Paton, Eunice Allen,
- Anne Glover Discovered a new symbiosis between
plants and bacteria - Martyn Poliakoff
- Ken Seddon Transformed Green Chemistry
- Colin Self Demonstrated that antibodies in
vivo can be activated by light - Gene Stanley
23The UCL Venture Research initiative
- UCL announced on 11 December 2008 the launching
of The Provosts Venture Research Prize. - The Provost will provide support for approved
Venture Research projects for at least three
years. - The standard set will be exceptionally high.
- Typical costs might be 100K pa. We will be
looking for the research that could radically
change the way we think about an important
subject and for researchers whose main
requirement is freedom. - It will be restricted to members of UCL
initially, but we hope that other universities
might wish to join our initiative. Each
university would support from its own funds the
cost of Venture Research projects each would
approve. -
24Scientific Freedom The Elixir of Civilization
Donald W Braben, Wiley 2008.
25UK based Nobel Prize winners emerging the decade
that work started, and average per decade of
real (2003) Government RD spend
D W Braben 2009
26Number of UK based Nobel prize winners per decade
actual and expected if average before 1970
maintained
D W Braben 2009