The emergence and diffusion of DNA microarray technology.

Tim Lenoir, Eric Giannella
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引用次数: 61

Abstract

Unlabelled: The network model of innovation widely adopted among researchers in the economics of science and technology posits relatively porous boundaries between firms and academic research programs and a bi-directional flow of inventions, personnel, and tacit knowledge between sites of university and industry innovation. Moreover, the model suggests that these bi-directional flows should be considered as mutual stimulation of research and invention in both industry and academe, operating as a positive feedback loop. One side of this bi-directional flow--namely; the flow of inventions into industry through the licensing of university-based technologies--has been well studied; but the reverse phenomenon of the stimulation of university research through the absorption of new directions emanating from industry has yet to be investigated in much detail. We discuss the role of federal funding of academic research in the microarray field, and the multiple pathways through which federally supported development of commercial microarray technologies have transformed core academic research fields.

Results and conclusion: Our study confirms the picture put forward by several scholars that the open character of networked economies is what makes them truly innovative. In an open system innovations emerge from the network. The emergence and diffusion of microarray technologies we have traced here provides an excellent example of an open system of innovation in action. Whether they originated in a startup company environment that operated like a think-tank, such as Affymax, the research labs of a large firm, such as Agilent, or within a research university, the inventors we have followed drew heavily on knowledge resources from all parts of the network in bringing microarray platforms to light. Federal funding for high-tech startups and new industrial development was important at several phases in the early history of microarrays, and federal funding of academic researchers using microarrays was fundamental to transforming the research agendas of several fields within academe. The typical story told about the role of federal funding emphasizes the spillovers from federally funded academic research to industry. Our study shows that the knowledge spillovers worked both ways, with federal funding of non-university research providing the impetus for reshaping the research agendas of several academic fields.

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DNA微阵列技术的出现和推广。
无标签:科学技术经济学研究人员广泛采用的创新网络模型假设了企业和学术研究项目之间相对多孔的边界,以及大学和行业创新场所之间发明、人员和隐性知识的双向流动。此外,该模型表明,这些双向流动应被视为工业界和学术界研究和发明的相互刺激,作为一个正反馈回路运行。这种双向流动的一侧——即;通过大学技术许可将发明流入工业——已经得到了很好的研究;但是,通过吸收来自工业的新方向来刺激大学研究的反向现象还有待详细研究。我们讨论了联邦政府对微阵列领域学术研究的资助作用,以及联邦政府支持的商业微阵列技术开发改变核心学术研究领域的多种途径。结果和结论:我们的研究证实了几位学者提出的观点,即网络经济的开放性是它们真正创新的原因。在一个开放的系统中,创新来自网络。我们在这里追踪到的微阵列技术的出现和传播提供了一个开放的创新系统的良好例子。无论他们是起源于像Affymax这样的智囊团运作的初创公司环境,还是安捷伦这样的大公司的研究实验室,还是在研究型大学内部,我们所追随的发明者都在很大程度上利用了网络各部分的知识资源,将微阵列平台公之于众。联邦政府对高科技初创公司和新工业发展的资助在微阵列早期历史的几个阶段都很重要,联邦政府对使用微阵列的学术研究人员的资助对于改变学术界几个领域的研究议程至关重要。关于联邦资金作用的典型故事强调了联邦资助的学术研究对工业的溢出效应。我们的研究表明,知识溢出是双向的,联邦政府对非大学研究的资助为重塑几个学术领域的研究议程提供了动力。
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