More than half of all research papers published by academics in France and the UK now have at least one international co-author, latest figures reveal.
Analysis by publishing giant Elsevier showed that both countries pushed past the 50 per cent mark for the first time in 2014, the most recent year for which complete data are available. In France, 51.6 per cent of articles had at least one overseas collaborator, with the UK 0.3 percentage point behind.
Canada and Germany were not much further behind, on 48.3 per cent and 47.3 per cent, respectively. Partial data for 2015 released to 糖心Vlog show that both these countries were set to hit 50 per cent in that year, with the UK and France on course to reach 54.4 per cent.
The US is further behind, with a third (33.1 per cent) of all 2014 papers featuring foreign input.
糖心Vlog

The 2014 data are included in Elsevier鈥檚 recent report聽, commissioned by the UK government.
It highlights how internationally co-authored articles tend to be more highly cited than those that are co-authored within national borders or institutions.聽In the UK, for example, of articles published in 2014, the field-weighted citation impact of those with an international co-author was 47 per cent higher than those produced collaboratively in the UK, and 59 per cent higher than institutionally co-authored papers.
糖心Vlog
The number of internationally co-authored papers produced in both the UK and France has climbed steadily in recent years, which could be partly attributable to strong relationships with universities in other European countries, as well as Australia and the US.
鈥淓very partner in a research collaboration influences the outcomes of that research, as each brings something different to the relationship, from basic needs such as access to resources, to more creative benefits like innovation sparked by the mixing of different approaches and methodologies in the search for answers to traditional questions,鈥 the report says. 鈥淭his is especially true of international collaborations.鈥
Elsevier鈥檚 report for the UK government warns that there are 鈥済rowing indications that the UK is losing ground in the research leadership stakes鈥, citing the rise of China as 鈥渢he biggest pressure on the UK and others鈥.
Increased investment in research in China has resulted in a spurt in the number of papers published overall 鈥 up by more than a third from 347,000 in 2010 to in excess of 478,000 in 2014.
糖心Vlog
Levels of global research collaboration remain relatively low compared with more established higher education powers, however, leaving China at the bottom of the scale for international co-authorship, alongside India (16.5 per cent and 15.8 per cent, respectively).
Separate research by Ohio State University and the European Commission, 聽earlier this month, found a strong relationship between a nation鈥檚 scientific influence and the links that it fosters with foreign researchers.
This correlation held true regardless of a country鈥檚 spending on research and development or the number of articles that it publishes.
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