Hmmm. I dunno. Can of worms, this one mate.
I mean, yes, the rate at which you can now churn out data is higher than before. So-called "high throughput" techniques mean that **loads** (no more scientific/ specific than that!) of samples can be analysed in much less time.
(Some) Undergraduate students regularly use techniques which were absolutely novel in the early 80s. A lot of Molecular biology (DNA) techniques are now so straightforward that most research science companies supply "kits" whereby the researcher can extract DNA, proteins, whatever without a real understanding of what they're doing.
ie. not that much training is necessary to do it. Thus freeing up other folk to do novel, cutting edge stuff, who can rely on a steady stream of good quality starting material to analyse.
--- But I suppose you don't have to understand the benefits of cross ply to fit a tyre...---
For example, I will routinely do stuff that was *truely* cutting edge 5 years ago, but is now relatively routine, and is done on a commercial basis. Ok, so it fails a lot, but it works sometimes

But how do you measure "all we know in neurology "

Is it the rate at which neurological papers are coming out?? It can't possibly be disease treatment, beacause since 1992 (or so), I don't know that clinical treatment has moved on much.
It IS a bit of a daft statistic. And somewhat dismissive of the massive advances made in the last century.
Look at Ramon y Cajal
http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1906/cajal-bio.htmlI suppose at some, so great was *his* contribution, regarding our understanding and visualisation of single nerve fibres, at some point, he could have said (presumably before 1934 when he died) "90% of all we know in neurology has been discovered in the last 15 years".
Its a bit like Carl Fogary famously dismissing the great of the 40, 50s and 60s when he was blathering on about how great he was on the Isle of Man. Yes, he was truely brilliant, and Yes, much faster than the old duffers, but give him a solid rear end, girders up front, and maybe a hand change, and cobbled roads, King Carl, and I wonder if he'd still be quicker than them. Maybe....
Anyway, thats a bit off topic. Here, I've been at this for ages!! Answer: its a bit of a "stat for radio" I'd reckon. Tho R4s science coverage is quite good I'd say... Right- Back to the lab!
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