I don't have a great answer for you on that. What I would say is that when you look at investments in research funding, those are also investments in people. If you look at the percentage of graduate students who get federal scholarships and fellowships—it's important, don't get me wrong—it is a relatively small layer of those students who are actually funded to do research in the country.
The grants are another important element of that. When you look at programs like the CFREF, which we just discussed, and if you look at the increases that came out of the Naylor report, you see it varies a bit by agency. The agencies are going to be here in the next hour, so maybe they can speak to this. A large part of those grants goes to fund trainees. In some disciplines, virtually all of it is going to fund trainees.
It is fair to be looking at the scholarships and fellowships piece. I think it's a very clear measure of what a specific amount going to a student would look like, but you also can't forget that the lion's share of the funding that we think of as going to the scientists, the academic professors, is actually flowing to students and trainees as well.