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Witty Review Encouraging a British Invention Revolution: Sir Andrew Witty’s Review of Universities and Growth Industry Strategic Sector - Heat Maps Presented by: Iris Kisjes Date: Oct 2013

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Page 1: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Witty Review Encouraging a British Invention Revolution:

Sir Andrew Witty’s Review of Universities and Growth

Industry Strategic Sector - Heat Maps

Presented by: Iris Kisjes

Date: Oct 2013

Page 2: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Heat Map - Index

Aerospace

Automotive

Life Sciences

Agri-tech

Information Economy

Nuclear

Oil & Gas

Offshore Wind

Construction

Big Data

Satellites

Robotics

Life Sciences – Genetics and Synthetic Biology

Regenerative Medicine

Agri-Science

Advanced Materials & Nano Technology

Energy Storage

2

Page 3: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Aerospace: Top 20 organizations by publication

3

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 4: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Automotive Top 20 organizations by publication

4

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 5: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Life Sciences Top 20 organizations by publication

5

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 6: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Agri-tech Top 20 organizations by publication

6

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 7: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Information Economy Top 20 organizations by publication

7

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 8: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Nuclear Top 20 organizations by publication

8

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 9: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Oil & Gas Top 20 organizations by publication

9

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 10: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Offshore Wind Top 20 organizations by publication

10

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 11: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Construction Top 20 organizations by publication

11

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 12: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Big Data Top 20 organizations by publication

12

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 13: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Satellites Top 20 organizations by publication

13

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 14: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Robotics Top 20 organizations by publication

14

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 15: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Life Sciences –

Genetics and Synthetic Biology Top 20 organizations by publication

15

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 16: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Regenerative Medicine Top 20 organizations by publication

16

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 17: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Agri-Science Top 20 organizations by publication

17

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 18: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Advanced Materials

& Nano Technology Top 20 organizations by publication

18

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.

Page 19: Heat Maps — Witty Review

Energy Storage Top 20 organizations by publication

19

Introduction

The Witty Review investigates how Britain can encourage an invention revolution, and is

built on three premises:

1. Funding flows need to be structured by technology / industry, not by postcode, to

drive greater collaboration wherever the ‘idea flows’. Eliminating regional barriers

which create domestic competition instead of marshaling resources to run a global

race.

2. Universities have an extraordinary potential to enhance economic growth. Incentives

should be strengthened to encourage maximum engagement from Universities.

3. Governments should help facilitate the drive forward of globally competitive

technological ideas into real businesses.

These heat maps produced by Elsevier’s SciVal Analytics team are one of the tools

offered by the government to show the top Universities per Industrial Strategic sector.

Key

FWCI = Field-Weighted Citation Impact

(A measure of citation impact, based on the average number of citations received by a

group of publications compared to the world number of citations received by the same

type of publications) Red is lowest impact and green highest.

The columns which are titled "in top 1%" and "in top 10%" refer to the number of

publications from each institute that are in the top-cited x% of publications globally in this

subject area. The number in parentheses shows what proportion of the institution's total

publications in the area this represents.

Publication data source: Scopus

Based on relevant researchers per applicable discipline as indicated by the UK Research

Council.

Click here for more detail on the methodology, page96 and 118 of the report.