Pathways from Open Science to Invention Impact

Finn Valentin, Rasmus Lund Jensen, Ann Assmus

    Publikation: KonferencebidragPaperForskningpeer review

    Abstract

    This paper studies research directly underpinning inventions in biotech firms and its corresponding technological impact. Invention Specific Research (ISR) is characterized by its performance in open science in terms of the number of papers it generates in peer reviewed journals and their forward citations. The relevance of scholarly strong ISR is higher for particular types of issues in company R&D some of which are directly related to technology creation, such as inventions requiring solutions within narrow optima or implying expansion of the knowledge base of the firm. For both types of R&D issues we find that scholarly strong ISR leads to significantly higher technology impact and value. When ISR without specification to particular tasks in technology creation obtains lower technology impact of its inventions arguably it is because of its concentration in the explorative parts of company R&D. Whereas most previous literature has addressed the role of scholarly strong company research at the analytical level of the firm we find invention-level effects to be considerably stronger. Contrary to notions that have gained wide acceptance the thrust of this paper is that in the generation of science-based inventions scholarly research and technology represent highly related, if not identical, lines of thinking.
    OriginalsprogEngelsk
    Publikationsdato2010
    Antal sider22
    StatusUdgivet - 2010
    BegivenhedThe DRUID Summer Conference 2010 - London, Storbritannien
    Varighed: 16 jun. 201018 jun. 2010

    Konference

    KonferenceThe DRUID Summer Conference 2010
    Land/OmrådeStorbritannien
    ByLondon
    Periode16/06/201018/06/2010

    Citationsformater