The Survey of State Government Research and Development (R&D) provides comprehensive, uniform statistics regarding the extent of R&D activity performed and funded by departments and agencies in each of the nation's 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.
The Survey of State Government Research and Development (R&D) measures the extent of R&D activity performed and funded by the governments of each of the nation’s 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico (collectively, states). By employing consistent, uniform definitions and collection techniques, the survey allows collection of state R&D expenditures data that are comparable nationwide. The survey is a census of state government departments, agencies, commissions, public authorities, and dependent entities with R&D activities.
The survey was funded by the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics within the National Science Foundation, and data collection was conducted by the Census Bureau.
Status | Active |
---|---|
Frequency | Annual |
Reference Period | FY 2022 |
Next Release Date | November 2024 |
The Survey of State Government Research and Development (R&D) is the only source for comprehensive, uniform statistics regarding the extent of R&D activity performed and funded by departments and agencies in each of the nation’s 50 state governments, the government of the District of Columbia, and the government of Puerto Rico.
None.
Annual.
FY 2006.
State government fiscal year ending in 2022.
State government departments, agencies, commissions, public authorities, institutions, and other entities that operate separately or somewhat autonomously from the central state government—but where the state government maintains administrative or fiscal control over their activities—with the capacity to perform or fund R&D; units are collectively referred to as agencies.
Census.
505 agencies.
Not applicable.
The target population consists of all state departments, agencies, commissions, and dependent entities that funded R&D activities for state government fiscal years ending in 2022. Several industry-specific state commissions, which are generally chartered by state legislatures but are administered independently, are considered state agencies and included in the survey’s population of interest. Excluded are state-run colleges and universities, which are canvassed as part of NCSES’s Higher Education Research and Development (HERD) Survey. State-run laboratories or experiment stations controlled by state universities are also excluded from the respondent universe, as are any entities determined to be nonprofit or private as defined by the Census Bureau. Most state fiscal year periods begin 1 July and end the following 30 June. For example, FY 2022 is defined as the state fiscal period beginning on 1 July 2021 and ending on 30 June 2022. There are, however, five exceptions to the 30 June fiscal year end: New York (ends 31 March); Texas (ends 31 August); and Alabama, the District of Columbia, and Michigan (all end 30 September). For comparability, all states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico are surveyed at the same time.
The total universe includes all state government-dependent units with the capacity to perform or fund R&D, including those for the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, as defined by the Census Bureau’s Government Finance and Employment Classification Manual. All units were identified with the aid of a state coordinator who was appointed by the governor of each state, the governor of Puerto Rico, and the mayor of the District of Columbia. For FY 2022, e-mails were sent to the chief of staff for each governor’s office asking them to appoint a state coordinator. For the FY 2022 survey, state coordinators were provided with the list of agencies that were previously identified as having the potential to perform or fund R&D from the FY 2021 survey cycle. In addition, the list included agencies identified from a systematic review of state session laws and additional review of agencies reporting to the Census Bureau’s Census of Governments program by staff members from the Census Bureau and NCSES. State coordinators were asked to review this list and add agencies that they believed were involved with R&D and were not already identified. State agencies that have reported $0 R&D for the last three survey cycles were marked as inactive for this survey cycle. These will be reactivated for the FY 2023 survey cycle. State coordinators also adjusted the agency universe to remove agencies that have never had any qualifying R&D to report to NCSES, to add any agencies they thought were missing or could possibly have R&D to report, to address organizational changes within their respective states since the previous survey, and to provide updated agency contact information.
The Survey of State Government R&D is a census.
The survey was funded by NCSES. Data collection was conducted by the Census Bureau via an e-mail containing a fillable Portable Document Format (PDF) survey form. The survey was launched in October 2022, and responses were collected through mid-June 2023. The respondent questionnaire consisted of one screening question intended to reduce the burden on agency respondents who did not have qualifying R&D expenditures during FY 2022, seven questions regarding R&D-related expenditures, and two questions regarding counts of employees.
Data collected under the survey are subject to automated data correction procedures using a combination of logical edits incorporated into the survey form, as well as telephone and e-mail follow-up with survey respondents by staff members from NCSES and the Census Bureau for any other data anomalies.
All state and national totals are summations of reported state agency data.
Not applicable.
In addition to a Census Bureau review of state session laws to identify agencies with the capacity to fund R&D, NCSES utilizes the expertise of an appointed state coordinator to assist in identifying state government agencies that have the capacity to perform or fund R&D. State coordinators are also offered the opportunity to review survey responses from their respective state agencies before results are finalized for data release. In cases where the state coordinator refused to cooperate or where some agencies did not respond to the survey, it is possible there may be an undercount of state government R&D activities. The undercount may occur despite efforts by staff members of NCSES and the Census Bureau to conduct additional queries and conduct outreach with state agencies that did not appoint a state coordinator. In other instances, the appointed state coordinator could misinterpret the NCSES definition and examples of qualifying R&D activities and not identify all state government-dependent units with the capacity to perform or fund R&D. However, no measures of coverage error are produced.
Of the 505 agencies in the survey universe, 502 (99.4%) responded to the survey. Of the 502 respondents, 400 (79.7%) reported having R&D activities in FY 2022. A mathematical imputation method was used to impute for one nonresponding agency known to have R&D in the past, namely New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs. An agency in Puerto Rico was removed from the survey because it reported expenditures for the entire agency budget rather than an R&D amount. Thus, nonresponse error is minimal.
All responses, including the initial agency data submissions and final state coordinator reviews, were received via e-mail or phone. Census Bureau staff performed basic logical edit checks and reviewed respondent comments, allowing staff to detect errors and work with respondents to correct them. Despite these efforts, some of the data reported could include expenditures for non-R&D activities, such as commercialization, environmental testing, or routine survey work. Similarly, some state data may also exclude minor R&D expenditure amounts from agencies not surveyed.
Data presented in trend tables in this report are from the most recently completed survey cycle. Agency-level data are available beginning with FY 2009. No survey of state governments’ FY 2008 R&D activity was conducted.
References to data prior to FY 2022 should be restricted to those published in this report for three reasons: (1) when completing the current-year survey, survey respondents may revise their prior-year data; (2) state coordinators may identify additional agencies to be canvassed that were not initially surveyed during the prior survey cycle, and many of these agencies will provide prior-year data during the current survey collection cycle; and (3) NCSES reviews data from prior years for consistency with current-year responses and, if necessary, may revise these data in consultation with respondents.
For FYs 1995, 1988, and 1987, data collections of state government R&D were conducted by nonfederal organizations that were supported by NCSES grants. Prior to those efforts, NCSES collected state government R&D data for FYs 1977, 1973, 1972, 1968, 1967, 1965, and 1964 in collaboration with the Census Bureau’s Census of Governments and related programs. Because of differences in the survey populations, in definitions of covered R&D activities, and in collection methods over time, the results of these historical surveys are not comparable with the statistics collected for FY 2006 and subsequent Surveys of State Government R&D.
Data from the Survey of State Government R&D are published in NCSES InfoBriefs and data tables available at https://ncses.nsf.gov/surveys/state-government-research-development/. Data from the Survey of State Government R&D are also used in the annual report National Patterns of R&D and the biennial report Science and Engineering Indicators.
Purpose. The Survey of State Government Research and Development (R&D) is the only source for comprehensive uniform statistics regarding the extent of R&D activity performed and funded by departments and agencies in each of the nation’s 50 state governments, the government of the District of Columbia, and the government of Puerto Rico.
Data collection authority. The information is solicited under the National Science Foundation (NSF) Act of 1950, as amended; the America COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2010; and Title 13, U.S. Code, § 8(b). It is collected under Office of Management and Budget control number 0607-0933, expiration date 31 July 2023.
Survey contractor. The Census Bureau, under NSF interagency agreement number NCSE-2203296, collected, processed, and tabulated the statistics in this report.
Survey sponsor. The National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES) within NSF.
Frequency. Annual.
Initial survey year. FY 2006.
Reference period. State government fiscal year ending in 2022.
Response unit. State government departments, agencies, commissions, public authorities, institutions, and other entities that operate separately or somewhat autonomously from the central state government—but where the state government maintains administrative or fiscal control over their activities—with the capacity to perform or fund R&D; units are collectively referred to as agencies.
Sample or census. Census.
Population size. The population comprised 505 agencies from the 50 state governments, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico with the capacity to perform or fund R&D during FY 2022. This year, agencies that reported $0 R&D the last three survey cycles were marked as inactive for this survey cycle. These will be reactivated for the FY 2023 survey cycle.
Sample size. Not applicable.
Target population. State government departments, agencies, commissions, public authorities, institutions, and other entities that operate separately or somewhat autonomously from the central state government but where the state government maintains administrative or fiscal control over their activities, as defined by the Census Bureau’s Government Finance and Employment Classification Manual (see chapter 1), and that funded or performed R&D for state government FY 2022. Several industry-specific state commissions, which are generally chartered by state legislatures but are administered independently, are considered state agencies and are included in the survey’s population. State-run colleges and universities, which are canvassed as part of NCSES’s Higher Education Research and Development (HERD) Survey, are excluded from the survey frame. State-run laboratories or experiment stations controlled by state universities are also excluded from the respondent universe, as are any entities determined to be nonprofit or private, as defined by the Census Bureau government classification criteria. However, because agricultural experiment stations in Connecticut are legally organized as a state government-dependent agency and because they are not affiliated with any university system, they are included in the survey’s population.
Sampling frame. The total universe includes all state government-dependent units, including those for the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, with the capacity to perform and fund R&D, identified with the aid of a state coordinator who is appointed by the governor of each state. For the FY 2022 survey, state coordinators were provided with a list of agencies that were previously identified from the FY 2021 survey cycle as having the potential to perform or fund R&D. In addition, these lists included agencies identified from a systematic review of state session laws and additional review of agencies reporting to the Census Bureau’s Census of Governments program by Census Bureau and NCSES staff. Coordinators were asked to review this list and add agencies that they believed were involved with R&D and were not already identified. State coordinators also adjusted the agency universe to remove agencies that have never had any qualifying R&D to report to NCSES, to add any agencies that were missing or could have R&D to report, to address organizational changes within their respective states since the previous survey, and to provide updated agency contact information.
Sample design. The Survey of State Government R&D is a census.
Data collection. For FY 2022, e-mails were sent to the chief of staff for all governors asking them to appoint a state coordinator. Census Bureau staff also reached out to prior state coordinators asking if they would be willing to continue to serve as the coordinators for the FY 2022 cycle. On a flow basis, state coordinators were sent a spreadsheet of agencies and contacts that were surveyed for the FY 2021 Survey of State Government R&D and asked to add agencies that might have some R&D, remove agencies from the survey universe that no longer perform or fund R&D or have been reorganized, and update agency points of contact. Once the state coordinators completed updates to the list of active agencies to be surveyed, they then sent introductory e-mails to the agency respondents stating that respondents would be receiving an e-mail with instructions and the survey form to be completed and e-mailed back to the Census Bureau. The state coordinators sent the updated spreadsheet of agencies and contacts back to the Census Bureau. After receiving the list of updated agencies, agencies identified as having the potential to perform or fund R&D were then e-mailed the survey form. Upon completion by all agencies within a state, the state coordinators were provided with a spreadsheet of agency responses to review the survey results before they were provided to NCSES for final analysis and dissemination.
Mode. State agencies were e-mailed a fillable Portable Document Format (PDF) form with auto summations and edits built in and were asked to complete the form. State coordinators were given a spreadsheet of potential state agencies and contact information to review and revise as necessary to add agencies to be surveyed, remove others from the survey as inactive, or make corrections to agency points of contact.
Response rates. Response rates were calculated for the FY 2022 Survey of State Government R&D and are available in table A-1.
All 50 state governments and the District of Columbia participated in the survey. A total of 31 of 52 state coordinators updated their spreadsheet. However, only 13 of 52 state coordinators officially responded to verify the final aggregate data for their states. For those agencies that did not have a coordinator appointed, final aggregate data files were sent to staff at NCSES for review. Some or all agencies submitted data in those states where the coordinator did not verify data officially. A coordinator was not appointed in Arizona, Georgia, Indiana, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, and West Virginia. Historically, NCSES has partnered with the Puerto Rico Institute of Statistics to collect information on R&D spending from Puerto Rico agencies. The Institute conducts its own survey of R&D activities in the territory and uses the NCSES survey questions for its collections of government agencies and provides the results to NCSES. Although the governor’s office did not appoint a coordinator for this year’s survey, they were able to provide a contact at the Department of Economic Development and Commerce who was able to provide an updated list of agencies and current contacts. Surveys were then sent directly to each agency in Puerto Rico. Responses were received from 9 of the 10 agencies in Puerto Rico that were sent the survey for the FY 2022 cycle.
The final agency response was 502 of 505 agencies (99.4%).
The following agencies did not respond to the survey and as a result may contribute to an undercount in the estimated public expenditures for R&D activities:
Of the 502 agencies that responded, 400 (79.7%) reported having some R&D activity in FY 2022.
Data editing. Initial agency data submissions were received via fillable forms e-mailed to the Census Bureau analyst. Basic logical edit checks, review of respondent comments, and comparisons of data from previous surveys allowed Census Bureau and NCSES staff to detect data errors and work with respondents to correct them. Census Bureau and NCSES staff also conducted follow-up calls to agencies with major data changes in R&D between FY 2021 and FY 2022 to ensure the accuracy of the survey data. Major data changes are dependent on the state and type of agency. After all the agencies in a state submitted responses, a spreadsheet of aggregated agency data was sent to the coordinators. They were asked to perform a final verification of aggregated agency data.
Imputation. Data was imputed for one agency for this cycle. New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs was imputed using the average of prior year reporting patterns. The reported total for Midwest Dairy was broken out across the divisions in Arkansas, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, and South Dakota based on percentages each division contributed as per the annual report. All state and national totals are aggregates of reported agency data. Each state government’s organizational structure, laws, and delegation of powers within its purview are unique. No universally applied methods of imputation can be used across all state government agencies and still account for these structural differences. This is consistent with basic statistical methods used by the Census Bureau’s Census of Governments, Survey of State Government Finance. Therefore, R&D expenditures may be underestimated in states where agencies failed to respond. When imputation methods are needed, they are handled on an individual state-by-state basis.
Weighting. Not applicable.
Variance estimation. Not applicable.
Sampling error. Not applicable.
Coverage error. In addition to a Census Bureau review of state session laws to identify agencies with the capacity to fund R&D, NCSES utilizes the expertise of an appointed state coordinator to assist in identifying state government agencies that have the capacity to perform or fund R&D. State coordinators are also offered the opportunity to review survey responses from their respective state agencies before results are finalized for data release. In cases where the state coordinator refused to cooperate or where some agencies failed to respond to the survey, it is possible there may be an undercount of state government R&D activities. The undercount may occur despite efforts by NCSES and Census Bureau staff to conduct additional queries and outreach with state agencies that did not appoint a state coordinator. In other instances, the appointed state coordinator could misinterpret the survey definition and examples of qualifying R&D activities and thus fail to identify all state government-dependent units with the capacity to perform or fund R&D. However, no measures of coverage error are produced.
Nonresponse error. Of the 505 agencies in the survey universe, 502 (99.4%) responded to the survey. Of the 502 respondents, 400 (79.7%) reported having R&D activities in FY 2022. A mathematical statistical method was used to impute one nonresponding agency known to have R&D in the past, namely the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs. No other imputation was used for the other nonresponding agencies because the other agencies historically have reported not having R&D. An agency in Puerto Rico was removed from the survey because it reported expenditures for the entire agency budget rather than an R&D amount. Nonresponse error is minimal.
Measurement error. The most common form of nonsampling error in the Survey of State Government R&D is in respondents’ interpretation of the survey definition of qualifying R&D activities. To mitigate any potential misinterpretations, several steps were taken. NCSES provided a series of examples specific to the types of activities performed or funded by state government agencies in the survey questionnaire’s definitions and examples. All responses, including the initial agency data submissions and final state coordinator verifications, were received via e-mail or phone. Census Bureau staff performed basic logical edit checks and reviewed respondent comments, allowing staff to detect errors and work with state respondents to correct them. Despite these efforts, some of the data reported could include expenditures for non-R&D activities, such as non-R&D salaries, commercialization, environmental testing, or routine survey or monitoring work. Similarly, some state data may also exclude minor R&D expenditure amounts from agencies not surveyed.
State government R&D totals can display considerable volatility between survey cycles. For example, state agency expenditures are influenced by several national and state-specific factors, and large changes (either increases or decreases) are not unusual, especially for discretionary spending items such as R&D. States often will create special funds to support specific research activities for a limited time. These funds may have a one-time appropriation from the legislature and expire within 2–5 fiscal years; state agencies obligate those funds for specific R&D projects, depending on availability and expiration of funding authority, as well as other program-specific and administrative considerations. Data reported are agency direct expenditures for R&D in a given fiscal year, not obligations. As such, in the case of multiyear grants to extramural performers, an agency’s expenditures for that fiscal year may be greater than its obligations because expenditures may include spending from the previous year’s appropriations, depending on the specific budget authority granted by the legislature. It is likely that some portion of the reported changes reflects measurement and coverage errors. In the case of R&D funds for extramural performers, some agencies were able to report only multiyear obligations rather than single-year expenditures.
The survey asked about state agencies’ expenditures for R&D at the end of FY 2022. Most states and Puerto Rico have a fiscal year that begins 1 July and ends the following 30 June. For example, FY 2022 is the state fiscal period beginning on 1 July 2021 and ending on 30 June 2022. There are, however, five exceptions to the 30 June fiscal year end: New York (ends 31 March); Texas (ends 31 August); and Alabama, the District of Columbia, and Michigan (all end 30 September). For comparability, all states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico are surveyed at the same time.
A state’s R&D priorities may be shaped by the state’s unique legislative and budgeting processes. State budget practices vary considerably due to both political and historical reasons. Nineteen states enact biennial budgets. Of these states, Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, and Texas have both biennial legislative sessions and biennial budgets. The remaining 15 states of Connecticut, Hawaii, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming hold annual legislative sessions but maintain biennial budgeting. Only North Dakota and Wyoming enact consolidated 2-year budgets; other biennial budget states enact two annual budgets at one time. As such, the nature of a state’s budget priorities for R&D may be determined on a biennial basis in some states; in others, however, it may be determined on an annual basis. In states with biennial budgets, the legislatures will often make supplemental appropriations to the second-year budget, which may result in further changes to the initial funding priorities.
The data exclude R&D expenditures by state governments that did not flow through state agencies’ budgets. The state totals do not include direct appropriations from state legislatures to colleges and universities. Higher education institutions’ expenditures from state government appropriations are available from NCSES’s HERD Survey. For FY 2022, state government agencies reported $1 billion in expenditures used to support R&D performance by academic institutions. A major factor for the difference between totals reported in NCSES’s HERD Survey and the Survey of State Government R&D is that direct appropriations to state-run universities are included in the former but not in the latter. Another likely factor is the exclusion of R&D at agricultural experiment stations from the state survey totals because they are generally associated with land-grant colleges and universities and are canvassed on the HERD Survey.
Direct comparison of state agency expenditures should also be viewed with caution because state governments often reorganize departments and agencies such that some divisions and offices that were part of one agency may be moved to another agency. In other instances, entire departments may be reorganized into newly created departments. Although the FY 2022 Survey of State Government R&D encountered several instances of these organizational changes in several states, the survey itself is not designed to measure specific changes in state government organization. To account for these and other changes in the data between FY 2021 and FY 2022, staff from the Census Bureau and NCSES conducted follow-up calls for some agencies with major data changes, depending on the type of agency and state, to ensure the accuracy of the survey data.
Data specific to state government agencies were first released with the FY 2009 survey results and are also included in the FY 2022 data tables. Specific agency-level data for FY 2006 and FY 2007 are not available.
The current Survey of State Government R&D has been conducted for FY 2006, FY 2007, FY 2009, FYs 2010–11, FYs 2012–13, FYs 2014–15, FY 2016, FY 2017, FY 2018, FY 2019, FY 2020, FY 2021, and FY 2022. (No survey was conducted for state governments for FY 2008.) Data presented in trend tables in this report are from the most recently completed survey cycle. References to prior-year data should be restricted to those published in this report for two reasons: (1) when completing the current year’s survey, survey respondents may revise their prior year’s data, and (2) NCSES reviews data for prior years for consistency with current-year responses and, if necessary, may revise these data in consultation with respondents.
NCSES has collected state government R&D data for FY 1964, FY 1965, FY 1967, FY 1968, FY 1972, FY 1973, and FY 1977 in collaboration with the Census Bureau’s Census of Governments and related programs. For FY 1987, FY 1988, and FY 1995, data collections of state government R&D were conducted by nonfederal organizations that were supported by NSF grants. As a result of differences in the survey populations, in definitions of covered R&D activities, and in collection methods over time, the results of these historical surveys are not comparable with the statistics collected for the FY 2006 and subsequent Surveys of State Government R&D.
Changes in survey coverage and population. Each year, state coordinators update the universe of agencies most likely to have funded or performed R&D based on changes in funding authority, organization changes within the government, or other initiatives by the legislature. No survey was conducted for state governments for FY 2008. Beginning with the FY 2009 survey cycle, state coordinators were no longer able to overwrite the aggregate R&D data reported by state agencies to correct or modify the state total. Any changes or revisions were now required to be made at the state government agency level.
Changes in questionnaire.
Changes in reporting procedures or classification.
Applied research. Original investigation undertaken in order to acquire new knowledge. It is, however, directed primarily toward a specific, practical aim or objective.
Basic research. Experimental or theoretical work undertaken primarily to acquire new knowledge of the underlying foundations of phenomena and observable facts, without any particular application or use in view.
Construction and acquisition of facilities used primarily for R&D. Includes the acquisition of, construction of, and major repairs or alterations to structures, works, equipment, facilities, or land for use in R&D activities. Construction and acquisition of land and facilities used primarily for R&D includes major costs for construction and purchase of buildings to be primarily used as R&D facilities.
Experimental development. Systematic work, drawing on knowledge gained from research and practical experience and producing additional knowledge, which is directed to producing new products or processes or to improving existing products or processes.
Performers, extramural. Those outside the department or agency who perform R&D under the administrative oversight or control of that department or agency. This may include projects for the department or agency as well as the department’s or agency’s extramural research programs. Extramural performers include the following:
Performers, intramural. Department’s or agency’s own employees who perform R&D, which includes R&D performed by those employees and services performed by others in support of an internal R&D project (e.g., laboratory testing).
Research and development. Comprise creative and systematic work undertaken in order to increase the stock of knowledge—including knowledge of humankind, culture, and society—and to devise new applications of available knowledge. Sources and examples of R&D funding include the following:
Recommended data tables
These tables present the results of the FY 2022 Survey of State Government Research and Development (R&D), conducted by the Census Bureau under an interagency agreement with the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics within the National Science Foundation. The Census Bureau employed a methodology similar to one they use to collect data from state and local governments on other censuses and surveys.
The survey was distributed to departments, agencies, commissions, public authorities, and other state-run entities within the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico that were considered likely to conduct or fund R&D activities. (The District of Columbia and Puerto Rico are referred to as states and treated as state equivalents throughout this report.) Respondents that did not have a qualifying R&D activity were not required to complete the questionnaire beyond a screening question. All 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico participated in the survey. Respondents were asked to provide statistics on their total R&D expenditures and amounts for intramural and extramural performers; the amount of intramural R&D devoted to basic research, applied research, and experimental development activities by federal and nonfederal funds; the amount for which the federal government was an original source of funds for both intramural and extramural R&D and from which federal agency the funding came; and the amount of money allocated to particular government functions. An additional question asked for expenditures on construction and acquisition of R&D facilities and major equipment. Additional questions were asked about the number of employees (researchers, technicians, and support staff) and full-time equivalent personnel for intramural R&D.
Christopher V. Pece of the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES) developed and coordinated this report under the guidance of Amber Levanon Seligson, NCSES Program Director, and under the leadership of Emilda B. Rivers, NCSES Director; Christina Freyman, NCSES Deputy Director; and John Finamore, NCSES Chief Statistician.
Under NCSES interagency agreement with the Census Bureau, Vicki Kuppala and Millicent Grant, under the supervision of Michael Flaherty, Chief, Research, Development, and Innovation Surveys Branch at the Census Bureau, compiled the tables in this report. Elizabeth Willhide and Millicent Grant at the Census Bureau also conducted legal review of state sessions laws and agency founding legislation to update the survey frame.
NCSES thanks the program and budget offices at the state agencies that provided information for this report.
National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES). 2023. Survey of State Government Research and Development: FY 2022. NSF 24-305. Alexandria, VA: National Science Foundation. Available at https://ncses.nsf.gov/surveys/state-government-research-development/2022.
For additional information about this survey or the methodology, contact