I just registered for an event that celebrates the 35th anniversary of a particular science and engineering program, and one question they posed was, to paraphrase, "Science has changed a lot in the last 35 years. Please make three predictions about science in the next 35 years."
I'd be curious for readers' views on this. My quick take:
- There will be far more AI/machine learning/software agent-assisted activity. That seems a certainty, and hopefully it may alleviate some repetitive drudgery in certain types of research.
- Hopefully I am wrong about this, but I have a feeling that we are still trending in the direction of a widening divide between "have" and "have not" research universities, in terms of having the financial resources to do leading science and engineering research.
- Foundation investments may be a growing portion of basic research support, for good or ill. Governmental agencies will face increasing constraints on finances and pressure to concentrate more on short-term and applied work with some claimed quick benefit to economic competitiveness or national security.