Showing posts with label Patents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patents. Show all posts

The Agglomeration of U.S. Ethnic Inventors

The Agglomeration of U.S. Ethnic Inventors
Working Paper Publication Date: July 2008
HBS Working Paper Number: 09-003

The ethnic composition of US inventors is undergoing a significant transformation—with deep impacts for the overall agglomeration of US innovation. This study applies an ethnic-name database to individual US patent records to explore these trends with greater detail. The contributions of Chinese and Indian scientists and engineers to US technology formation increase dramatically in the 1990s. At the same time, these ethnic inventors became more spatially concentrated across US cities. The combination of these two factors helps stop and reverse long-term declines in overall inventor agglomeration evident in the 1970s and 1980s. The heightened ethnic agglomeration is particularly evident in industry patents for high-tech sectors, and similar trends are not found in institutions constrained from agglomerating (e.g., universities, government).

Development of Inventions and Creative Ideas

OCW: Development of Inventions and Creative Ideas
Spring 2008

This course examines the role of the engineer as patent expert and as technical witness in court and patent interference and related proceedings. It discusses the rights and obligations of engineers in connection with educational institutions, government, and large and small businesses.

R&D coming from colleges

Stanford owns the patent on Google's Internet search technology, and last year, the university earned $48 million from 428 technologies licensed to companies. Texas Instruments was early to recognize the power of university research. The company has partnerships with Rice, Georgia Tech and the University of Illinois, among others, and with universities in India and China. TI CEO Rich Templeton spoke with USA TODAY Jones about the R&D coming from colleges.

Invention

Annals of Innovation: Who says big ideas are rare?, The New Yorker, May 2008.

Small inventors, beware. You’ve got to be crazy to be an entrepreneur. You’ve got to be even crazier to be an inventor. Patent reform could change things, but opportunities abound in the nascent intellectual property marketplace. VentureBeat.com. April 2008.

The Patent Portfolio: A Strategic Management Tool

This paper by Erik Garcia from Richard Ivey School of Business (UWO) provides an approach to patent portfolio management, which allows managers to understand the current patent position of the company in the market, to perform technological competitor monitoring and technological forecasting, to leverage the company’s decision making process, and to create effective defensive tactics.

Google Patent Search

All patents available through Google Patent Search come from the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). Patents issued in the United States are public domain government information, and images of the entire database of U.S. patents are readily available online via the USPTO website.

The Ethnic Composition of U.S. Inventors

This paper describes a new approach for quantifying the ethnic composition of U.S. inventors with previously unavailable detail. (Harvard Business School Working Knowledge)

"The contributions of immigrants to U.S. technology formation are staggering. While the foreign-born account for just over 10 percent of the U.S. working population, they represent 25 percent of the U.S. science and engineering workforce and nearly 50 percent of those with doctorates. Even looking within the Ph.D. level, ethnic researchers make an exceptional contribution to science as measured by Nobel Prizes, election to the National Academy of Sciences, patent citation counts, and so on."

Peer to Patent

Peer-to-Patent opens the patent examination process to public participation for the first time. Become part of this historic pilot program. Help the USPTO find the information relevant to assessing the claims of pending patent applications. Become a community reviewer and improve the quality of patents.
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