Is there a disconnect? I think we're all seeing the same data. The data speaks for itself. There is a decrease of publications in French. I can only speak for NSERC here. I cannot speak for the social sciences and the health sciences granting councils. For NSERC, we see, as I mentioned, only 10% of the grant applications being submitted to us in French. I think there is a consensus that there's a decrease in the presence of French in the research world.
There are many things we can do, as I mentioned in my remarks, collectively. One of the other witnesses earlier today mentioned the San Francisco declaration, the DORA declaration. To demystify this, this is an approach that decreases the emphasis put on the impact factor of journals. Typically, English-language journals have much higher impact factors. NSERC has adopted the DORA principles, and we're in the process of putting that in place, where research grant applications will be assessed with a different lens from the traditional impact factor kind of lens.
This is one action. We need to continue our work in promoting science in French. As I said, we are doing activities. We could do more. We need more funds to do that. With the data I presented to you tonight, which was a very small slice of data, we can continue to demystify the notion that the success rates are different at NSERC when grant applications are submitted in French or in English.