School of Life Sciences, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK.
Biomedical Science Research and Training Centre, College of Medical Sciences, Yobe State University, Damaturu, Nigeria.
Nat Commun. 2021 Jun 8;12(1):3429. doi: 10.1038/s41467-021-23784-8.
Neuroscience research in Africa remains sparse. Devising new policies to boost Africa's neuroscience landscape is imperative, but these must be based on accurate data on research outputs which is largely lacking. Such data must reflect the heterogeneity of research environments across the continent's 54 countries. Here, we analyse neuroscience publications affiliated with African institutions between 1996 and 2017. Of 12,326 PubMed indexed publications, 5,219 show clear evidence that the work was performed in Africa and led by African-based researchers - on average ~5 per country and year. From here, we extract information on journals and citations, funding, international coauthorships and techniques used. For reference, we also extract the same metrics from 220 randomly selected publications each from the UK, USA, Australia, Japan and Brazil. Our dataset provides insights into the current state of African neuroscience research in a global context.
非洲的神经科学研究仍然很少。制定新的政策来促进非洲的神经科学领域是必要的,但这些政策必须基于在很大程度上缺乏的研究成果的准确数据。这些数据必须反映非洲大陆 54 个国家的研究环境的异质性。在这里,我们分析了 1996 年至 2017 年期间与非洲机构有关的神经科学出版物。在 12326 篇被 PubMed 索引的出版物中,有 5219 篇清楚地表明这项工作是在非洲进行的,由非洲的研究人员领导 - 平均每个国家和每年约有 5 篇。从这里,我们提取期刊和引文、资金、国际合著以及使用的技术的信息。作为参考,我们还从英国、美国、澳大利亚、日本和巴西各随机选择了 220 篇出版物,从这些出版物中提取了相同的指标。我们的数据集提供了在全球背景下了解非洲神经科学研究现状的视角。