71,711 research outputs found
Smart Grid Domain: technology structure and innovation trends
Smart grids are an impactful emerging technology in the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) field. Different from prior research, the present study aims at providing a comprehensive overview of the smart grid domain by disentangling the technology structure, depicting the technology landscape, identifying the innovation trends, and highlighting the major players. Specifically, using a patent co-classification analysis and examining the U.S. patents granted from 2010 to 2017, we identified three different technology structures: (1) core structure, (2) supportive structure, and (3) complementary structure. The last two can be conceived as layers that encompass on and gravitate around the core technology of the smart grid. The framework provided can offer insights into a deeper understanding of entry dynamics and standards emergence
Tracing technological development trajectories: A genetic knowledge persistence-based main path approach
The aim of this paper is to propose a new method to identify main paths in a
technological domain using patent citations. Previous approaches for using main
path analysis have greatly improved our understanding of actual technological
trajectories but nonetheless have some limitations. They have high potential to
miss some dominant patents from the identified main paths; nonetheless, the
high network complexity of their main paths makes qualitative tracing of
trajectories problematic. The proposed method searches backward and forward
paths from the high-persistence patents which are identified based on a
standard genetic knowledge persistence algorithm. We tested the new method by
applying it to the desalination and the solar photovoltaic domains and compared
the results to output from the same domains using a prior method. The empirical
results show that the proposed method overcomes the aforementioned drawbacks
defining main paths that are almost 10x less complex while containing more of
the relevant important knowledge than the main path networks defined by the
existing method.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figure
The role of handbooks in knowledge creation and diffusion: A case of science and technology studies
Genre is considered to be an important element in scholarly communication and
in the practice of scientific disciplines. However, scientometric studies have
typically focused on a single genre, the journal article. The goal of this
study is to understand the role that handbooks play in knowledge creation and
diffusion and their relationship with the genre of journal articles,
particularly in highly interdisciplinary and emergent social science and
humanities disciplines. To shed light on these questions we focused on
handbooks and journal articles published over the last four decades belonging
to the research area of Science and Technology Studies (STS), broadly defined.
To get a detailed picture we used the full-text of five handbooks (500,000
words) and a well-defined set of 11,700 STS articles. We confirmed the
methodological split of STS into qualitative and quantitative (scientometric)
approaches. Even when the two traditions explore similar topics (e.g., science
and gender) they approach them from different starting points. The change in
cognitive foci in both handbooks and articles partially reflects the changing
trends in STS research, often driven by technology. Using text similarity
measures we found that, in the case of STS, handbooks play no special role in
either focusing the research efforts or marking their decline. In general, they
do not represent the summaries of research directions that have emerged since
the previous edition of the handbook.Comment: Accepted for publication in Journal of Informetric
Challenges for chemical information extraction and text retrieval
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Public or private economies of knowledge: The economics of diffusion and appropriation of bioinformatics tools
The past three decades have witnessed a period of great turbulence in the economies of biological knowledge, during which there has been great uncertainty as to how and where boundaries could be drawn between public or private knowledge especially with regard to the explosive growth in biological databases and their related bioinformatic tools. This paper will focus on some of the key software tools developed in relation to bio-databases. It will argue that bioinformatic tools are particularly economically unstable, and that there is a continuing tension and competition between their public and private modes of production, appropriation, distribution, and use. The paper adopts an ?instituted economic process? approach, and in this paper will elaborate on processes of making knowledge public in the creation of ?public goods?. The question is one of continuously creating and sustaining new institutions of the commons. We believe this critical to an understanding of the division and interdependency between public and private economies of knowledge
Scientometric mapping as a strategic intelligence tool for the governance of emerging technologies
How can scientometric mapping function as a tool of ’strategic intelligence’ to aid the governance of emerging technologies? The present paper aims to address this question by focusing on a set of recently developed scientometric techniques, namely overlay mapping. We examine the potential these techniques have to inform, in a timely manner, analysts and decision-makers about relevant dynamics of technical emergence. We investigate the capability of overlay mapping in generating informed perspectives about emergence across three spaces: geographical, social, and cognitive. Our analysis relies on three empirical studies of emerging technologies in the biomedical domain: RNA interference (RNAi), Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) testing technologies for cervical cancer, and Thiopurine Methyltransferase (TPMT) genetic testing. The case-studies are analysed and mapped longitudinally by using publication and patent data. Results show the variety of ’intelligence’ inputs overlay mapping can produce for the governance of emerging technologies. Overlay mapping also confers to the investigation of emergence flexibility and granularity in terms of adaptability to different sources of data and selection of the levels of the analysis, respectively. These features make possible the integration and comparison of results from different contexts and cases, thus providing possibilities for a potentially more ’distributed’ strategic intelligence.
The generated perspectives allow triangulation of findings, which is important given the complexity featuring in technical emergence and the limitations associated with the use of single scientometric approaches
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